Engineering Would I be crazy to quit my Summer Engineering Internship?

AI Thread Summary
An Electrical Engineering student entering their Senior year expresses dissatisfaction with their summer internship, feeling unproductive due to a lack of assigned projects. Despite receiving good pay, the student struggles with self-esteem issues stemming from their inability to contribute meaningfully. They consider quitting the internship to pursue a summer research opportunity with a professor, which offers less pay but more learning potential. Suggestions from the discussion include exploring the possibility of transitioning to part-time work to balance both opportunities and brainstorming personal project ideas to enhance productivity at the internship. The importance of handling the situation delicately to avoid damaging their professional reputation is emphasized, along with the idea that the current role could still provide valuable experience if approached creatively.
BrandonEE
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Let me provide some background here. I am an Electrical Engineering student and will be entering my Senior year this fall. I was lucky enough to secure a summer internship with a company for the duration of the summer.

I am starting to realize that I may have not been so lucky. I am practically given 0 projects to work on and I find it hard to make a contribution here. The pay is great, but that factor makes me feel even more guilty for my lack of contribution. Some days I am forced to just spend the majority of my 8 and a half hour day just in my office staring.

Its not that my boss doesn't care, he just doesn't have the time to really mentor me. It kills me to waste that many hours in a day not being productive. I come from a family of immigrants, and understand people have done worse jobs for a fraction of the money that I am making, but that does not make me feel any better about the time that I am wasting.

I feel embarrassed attending morning meetings and being asked if I have any input and just replying "Sorry, nothing to add". The job is in a warehouse setting, and I always suggest to let me help by doing some of the warehouse/ manual labor type work. Whenever I suggest this my boss or higher ups will scoff as if that work is beneath me. Honestly, I agree that it is, but I would rather contribute in that form than make no contribution at all.

The lack of productivity and contribution to the company is really starting to affect my self esteem. I passed up an opportunity to do summer research with a professor of mine for this job. I have been thinking maybe I should try to get out of this while I can, and still be a part of the research. It pays about half of what I make here, but I think I would rather learn something and be productive and get paid less, than be a statue in my office all summer.

Would quitting my internship look bad? Do you think I should stick the internship out, or go for the summer research? I was also considering maybe trying to work at both locations part time to benefit from both opportunities.

I would love to hear any opinions on my issue maybe from someone who had a similar experience. I apologize if I made any errors in posting this, this is my first post on PF, this issue has been troubling me for some time so I joined here to ask this question specifically. Thanks in advance for any replies !
 
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BrandonEE said:
I was also considering maybe trying to work at both locations part time to benefit from both opportunities.
Welcome to the PF. :smile:

That sounds like a reasonable compromise, and your current boss might understand your request to go to part time because of the great lab research opportunity. It would not be seen as "quitting" if you handle it right, IMO.
 
This might seem a little off the wall at first, but you could turn your question around and instead ask how you can make the best of an opportunity where you have a lot of freedom to define your own work.

It's difficult to recommend specifics without knowing the details of where you're working and what you were hired to do - at least on paper. But maybe you could start by brainstorming some project ideas of your own. Think about process engineering for example. Is there any way that you could improve some process that goes on where you work - make it safer or more efficient? Maybe you could start by gathering some statistics that they don't currently have available. Another idea might be to put together some kind of product review. Make a presentation. Look at current trends. Is your company keeping up? What could they be doing better?

It's not easy figuring these things out and you have to be careful not to overstep your bounds. But this could very well be an opportunity staring you in the face.
 
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if someone is willing to pay you well and not hit you with a long laundry list of projects, take the money and work on whatever you want that interests you. I have a summer student, he'll work with the group but I am not expecting Earth shattering, ground breaking work out if him.
 
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That reminds me of a job I had before as a forest watchman where 99% of the time I had nothing to do. Just take your laptop, work on your own things, and get paid for that. However, if you think that there may be a more interesting opportunity, you should really make sure that you'd still get hired for it, so you don't end up without anything at all...
 
It may seem like a big world, but your reputation can propagate quite far.
 
I don't know if anyone on here works for any of the well known defense companies of your country, whichever country you are from?? Also, if you choose to work in one, do you think the engineering education provide from your school would adequately prepare you for the job. What do I mean by that? Well if you work at say Lockheed Martin and you work in the latest iteration of a missile or if you work at Pratt & Whitney, they assign you to work in the team helping out with building the jet...
Hello, I graduated from undergrad a few years ago with a Major in Physics and minor in Electrical Engineering. I tried to get experience working on and testing circuits through my professor who studied Neutrinos, however covid caused the opportunity to go away and I graduated with no experience or internships. I have attempted to break into the engineering industry with no success. Right now I am considering going for a Masters in Electrical Engineering and I need advice on if this would be...

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