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I never said anything to the contrary Michael. All I did was let old Harry know the
low standards his Alma Mater maintains. "Michael Seeley" wrote in message hlink.net... Jim, Hate to disagree, and I'm sure your daughter is in a fine program but a bachelor's degree is not required in the state of NC to get your PE. I'm glad she is pursuing her bachelors and hope my daughter pursues the same. While I realize NC is very poor in public education, the university system is not that shabby. "Jim" wrote in message news:0bhZa.73705$cF.22510@rwcrnsc53... "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Calif Bill wrote: And you would be the one full of ****. You can be an engineer in most states without registration. As a communications engineer, there is no registration required in most states. Just can not call yourself "Registered Engineer" "Professional Engineer" "Consulting Engineer". "Software Engineer" is OK, "Electronics Engineer" is OK, etc. Seeing asskissers response to burning no oil in normal operation, I would not use him or his employer in any capacity for any civil engineering needs. Odd that my Diploma says "Bachelors of Science in Engineering". Never been in an engineering job in the computer world that required I get the PE. Bill Way back when, at my alma mater, the guys in the various engineering schools used to say about themselves: "Before I got to this college, I couldn't spell engineer. Now I are one." I would have guessed as much based on the quality of college you most likely attended. My daughter is entering a Mechanical Engineering program at a prominent Midwestern college. Here is what they say: Qualifications: The College of Engineering enrollment is selective-students typically rank in the upper 20 percent or higher of their high school graduating class and score an average ACT composite of 26 or higher (or SAT combined scores of 1180 or higher). University admitted students who score an ACT Math of 24 or higher (or an SAT Math of 560 or higher) will be enrolled directly in the College. Selection is not determined by numbers alone, however. Applicants will be carefully reviewed for convincing evidence of a student's capacity to succeed as an engineering student. Program: 5 academic years with heavy emphasis on math, physics, materials science, engineering, graphics (CAD). A friend of my daughter said the program is tougher than the pre-med program he was in. The admissions standards for your alma mater are obviously rock bottom. |
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