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Old August 2nd 03, 12:09 AM
Jason Hsu
 
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"Jack Bennett" wrote in message ...

Take my advise, graduate first then look for a job!


Try telling that to the people who graduate with 5 or more job offers.
Do you really think these individuals waited until graduation day
before seriously conducting their job search? Of course, if you know
of a silver bullet for figuring out which specific companies are
actually hiring at any given moment, let me know. (Such silver
bullets from everyone else on this newsgroup are welcome.)

You could finish up with a job going belly up and have no MSEE.
Play it safe, get the ticket first. I see this happen all the time.

It sounds like you think the credentials are the most important thing.
The problem with this thinking is that many with this attitude end up
becoming the engineer who looks good on paper but can't engineer
his/her way out of a paper bag. What I learn and accomplish are the
most important things. You could argue that the BSEE is essential,
but I already have that.

The irony of my graduate school experience is that I feel like I have
accomplished more in one year than I did in 4 years as an
undergraduate despite the fact that UIUC (my undergraduate school) is
vastly superior to GMU (my graduate school) at hardware and controls.

If I felt that my MSEE and GPA were the #1 thing, I would not have
been able to take control systems or signal processing classes. I had
NO control systems background as an undergrad, and my signal
processing background was nothing more than earning a C in the
3-credit-hour introductory signal processing class. GMU, like all but
a handful of schools, is weak in control systems, and my graduation
date may be delayed by insufficient control systems course offerings.
Then there's the most important thing: If I defined myself by
credentials, then I would NOT have been able to do last semester's
independent study project, as it was very time-consuming and
difficult. If you think that one can become competent in an
engineering topic simply by plowing through the class, then I have
some Enron stock to sell you.

Bottom line: Because my MSEE is not that critical, I can afford to
take some calculated risks. Isn't that something every engineer needs
to be able to do?

Jason Hsu, AG4DG