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How Young Engineers and Our Economy Are Betrayed
ChristianWorldViewNetwork.Com ^ | 5/1/09 | Phyllis Schlafly

Posted on 05/02/2009 12:54:59 PM PDT by ReformationFan

The Georgia Dome, home of the Atlanta Falcons football team, was recently crowded with cheering fans and adrenaline-filled competitors. A thrilling competition crowned new champions. But this was not a football game. It was a robotics competition for high school students interested in engineering, a program that now attracts about 200,000 student-competitors and nearly 100,000 volunteers.

Known as FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology), this program demonstrates that there is no shortage of American engineering minds. Started nearly 20 years ago by Dean Kamen, the inventor of the clever Segway that officials scoot around on, this competition develops future American engineers.

The students are extraordinarily diverse, coming from public and private schools and homeschools, rich and poor, urban and rural, athletic and disabled. Colleges provide up to $10 million in scholarships.

Obviously, there is no shortage of teenage interest and aptitude in engineering. But their prospects for good American jobs are very limited.

(Excerpt) Read more at worldviewtimes.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: antifeminazi; engineers; phyllisschlafly; robotics; schlafly
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To: Incorrigible

You posted a chart for engineering manager, not major.

Per the same web site, “The median expected salary for a typical Electrical Engineer I in the United States is $58,238. This basic market pricing report was prepared using our Certified Compensation Professionals’ analysis of survey data collected from thousands of HR departments at employers of all sizes, industries and geographies. “

http://elearners.salary.com/salarywizard/layoutscripts/swzl_compresult.asp?jobcode=EN04100006&jobaltername=Level+I+Electrical+Engineer&jobtitle=Electrical+Engineer+I&narrowdesc=Engineering&narrowcode=EN01&zipcode=&metrocode=&statecode=&state=&pagenumber=1&searchpage=keywordtitleselect&searchtype=1&geo=U.S.+National+Averages

Per the BLS, in 2007, the latest tables I could readily find, the mean annual salary was $ 83,090.
http://www.bls.gov/oes/2007/may/oes_nat.htm#b15-0000

Something doesn’t add up here.


21 posted on 05/02/2009 3:20:11 PM PDT by algernonpj (He who pays the piper . . .)
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To: GraniteStateConservative

Bernie Sanders is assuming that companies want to hire Americans.

Many companies, as mentioned here would rather hire 5 cheap H-1B engineers who are virtually indentured to them.


22 posted on 05/02/2009 3:23:18 PM PDT by algernonpj (He who pays the piper . . .)
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To: Last Dakotan; redgolum

This phenomenon is also very common in IT.


23 posted on 05/02/2009 3:24:39 PM PDT by algernonpj (He who pays the piper . . .)
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To: BuffaloJack
To make matters worse, 2/3’s of all the engineers and scientists in the US are within 5 years of retirement.

The premise of the article is that US born Engineering Majors are somehow being betrayed.

Not one supporting fact.

An example of a fact would be that US born Engineering graduates can't get jobs. Where is that statistic?

The reason so few Americans pursue an Engineering degree is that it is too difficult. Foreign students are willing to put in the effort that is required to get the degree.

24 posted on 05/02/2009 3:28:41 PM PDT by Doe Eyes
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To: algernonpj
Something doesn’t add up here.

Electrical Engineer I in the United States is $58,238 - Starting pay.
Mean annual salary was $ 83,090. - Average pay (say 10 years experience).
Expect $100K to $125K for 20+ years.

25 posted on 05/02/2009 3:42:04 PM PDT by Doe Eyes
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To: Doe Eyes
"The reason so few Americans pursue an Engineering degree is that it is too difficult. Foreign students are willing to put in the effort that is required to get the degree."

Probably Reason #1, imho. From my own personal experience, even a two-year general engineering degree will go a long way in the real world, but even an associate's degree in engineering is a lot of work.

The 2 big rewards are: 1) the opportunity for a job that is generally interesting, well-paying, and has an impact bigger than yourself in some way; 2) the knowledge that the skills learned in obtaining the engineering degree are readily transferrable to almost any job or position. And what I mean by #2 are the problem solving skills that a person obtains, such as learning how to analyze a problem, come up with a solution (or more likely several solutions), and then deciding which solution is the best one for the given situation.

26 posted on 05/02/2009 4:05:48 PM PDT by Left2Right ("Starve the Beast!")
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To: ReformationFan

The FIRST Robotics competition is a lot of fun. Also a lot of work. Anyone on FR ever attended one?


27 posted on 05/02/2009 4:18:40 PM PDT by Right Wing Assault ( Obama, you're off the island!)
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To: NHResident

I agree. I am a licensed Civil Engineer. After 38 years in the consulting business I will retire next year.

I give my plumber more respect then the government OR private sector gives a Professional Civil Engineer. Folks want public infrastructure for “free”. Since they can’t, they prefer to buy other “products” with their tax dollars like welfare and day care provided by the public school [child care] system. Politicians don’t care much for infrastructure. After all bridges don’t vote, welfare recipients do!

Education of engineers parallels that of the rest of academia —pretty pathetic. Case in point -— the so called global warming scam would be laughed out of the Public Square if a plurality of the electorate had at least a real high school education.

The H1B Visa conduit is about to die from its own dead weight. The Obama depression is killing engineering jobs and the uneducated products of H1B diploma mills in the US are short circuiting the process.

Actually the H1B visa deal is an immigration pipeline. If you are a South Asian. you get your local BS degree, then enroll in a Masters program in a US diploma mill, get a job for low wages here, apply for a visa, get it and then boom you are on your way to a Green Card/citizenship.

I hired two HiB guys last fall. They were incompetent plus the work in the Obama Depression is withering away so I had to let them go. They may now have to go back home to India


28 posted on 05/02/2009 4:25:17 PM PDT by texican01
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To: Doe Eyes

I agree with Ms. Schlaffley that FIRST is generally a great activity.

The H1-B Visa situation is complicated - it’s both a cause and a symptom.

My view as an engineering professor as to why not enough students are attracted to science & engineering as a profession: For a generation or more, we have systematically rewarded professions who administer and redistribute wealth over professions who create new wealth. Finance/investement majors generally have lower entracnce requirements, have to study much less hard than engineering students, and receive similar starting salaries upon graduation. The disparity with lawyers is even greater. Both enjoy higher social status.

While we need good honest lawyer, and financial analysts, both of these professions deal fundamentally with redistribute existing wealth in more ‘just’ or ‘efficient’ ways. Students see that people who’ve chosen professions that actually build things end up working harder for less pay, and are often regarded as ‘boring’ or ‘geeky’ for their efforts.

A society that chooses to reward its “community organizers” doesn’t produce as many scientists and engineers as societies that are interested in producing wealth.

(And lest I sound bitter, I am very glad I went into my profession. I could have made more money elsewhere, but I make enough, get to work with intellectually stimulating ideas, and get to interact with smart young minds every day.)


29 posted on 05/02/2009 4:50:08 PM PDT by CaptainMorgantown
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To: BuffaloJack
To make matters worse, 2/3’s of all the engineers and scientists in the US are within 5 years of retirement.

Don't worry...President Obama is helping to extend that.

30 posted on 05/02/2009 4:57:39 PM PDT by Gondring (Paul Revere would have been flamed as a naysayer troll and told to go back to Boston.)
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To: Incorrigible; Mase; 1rudeboy; expat_panama

Hmmmmmm......


31 posted on 05/02/2009 5:45:53 PM PDT by Toddsterpatriot (Math is hard. Harder if you're stupid.)
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To: org.whodat
Yes it is, the problem with this country is we bring them here under the pretext that they are to get educated and go home and help increase the productivity of their country. The American people foot the bill under that assumption.

I don't know how you figure that the American people are footing that bill, but that's a small point. You can figure that anyone coming here on a student visa is expected to go home (if he's not learning to fly, but not land, jetliners), but H-1B's generally become U.S. citizens.

32 posted on 05/02/2009 5:59:04 PM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: ReformationFan

Phyllis Schlafly is exactly right. We are creating strong incentives for Americans with the aptitude to become engineers to become something else instead, both through H1B visas and through our refusal to protect domestic manufacturing from foreign competition. (That, incidentally, was another reason to provide loans to GM and Chrysler: the American car companies do most of their engineering and research and development here; the Japanese do most of that work in Japan).


33 posted on 05/02/2009 6:04:12 PM PDT by Thorin ("I won't be reconstructed, and I do not give a damn.")
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To: AdmSmith

“Science and technology is fun, but it is harder than being a DJ or a talk show presenter.”

If it just paid like a talk show host gig...they would be asking for more visa’s to prevent having to pay the wages.


34 posted on 05/02/2009 6:06:50 PM PDT by A Strict Constructionist (Support the 10th. Ammendment and become a Neo-terrorist.)
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To: Thorin

“We are creating strong incentives for Americans with the aptitude to become engineers to become something else instead,”

Law School application’s are on the rise again. This is just what we need...the usual American solution, the non-productive live off of the productive. I’ve never seen a lawyer invent anything but trouble.


35 posted on 05/02/2009 6:13:18 PM PDT by A Strict Constructionist (Support the 10th. Ammendment and become a Neo-terrorist.)
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To: algernonpj

“This phenomenon is also very common in IT.”

H1Bs are replete in corporate IT. House them 3 at a time in tiny apartments or homes owned by the corp. Work them to death. Pay them high for a while. Ramp down the project. They’re toast.

I heard tell of an H1B who, on a Sunday night just prior to starting a gig, after having flown in from India, was told not to show as the project was nixed. The guy couldn’t drive. That would’ve been a b)&*$.

That being said, how many people have been told to train their H1B replacements? Hmmmm. Or, had to rewrite code from jump because what was transmitted to the States was crap? Uh huh. Then, there are those US employees encouraged to take 6 month trips to S Asia or parts elsewhere to ‘help.’ Riiighht.

What is it? 6x salary here in the US for someone in a S Asia shop? Makes you all warm and fuzzy.


36 posted on 05/02/2009 6:57:13 PM PDT by combat_boots (When the government controls the captial, all that is left is tyranny. Tagline by Redwarning.)
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To: ReformationFan

I used to do talks at local schools for Engineers’ Week. I would always ask the classes (8th graqders) how many were interested in being engineers - got very few hands. They were always scared of the math. The public schools in my area are very poor in math and science - the dozen or so football coaches all seem to end up teaching them, and they suck the life out of them. They teach rote manipulation in math instead of teaching the theories and what the stuff is good for, and they stick to fact memorization in science. Who wants to listen to that?


37 posted on 05/02/2009 7:37:20 PM PDT by Some Fat Guy in L.A. (Nope. Not gonna do it.)
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To: Carry_Okie
One can make just as much as a Registered Nurse with far more job security without nearly as demanding an education.

I wish I'd saved an article from Forbes I found back in '04 or '05. They surveyed the CEO's of the Fortune 1000 to find out what the most common traits were among these captains of industry. One stat clearly stood out from the others. By a large percentage, more CEO's had been educated as engineers than any other field.

In an economy dominated by technology, it shouldn't surprise anyone that this was the case but it surprised me. It makes sense though. People educated in engineering that have a strong business acumen and exceptional leadership skills will make excellent candidates to run industry.

I wouldn't discourage anyone from becoming an engineer. I would also encourage them to gain an MBA to ensure they advance their careers.

38 posted on 05/02/2009 7:43:10 PM PDT by Mase (Save me from the people who would save me from myself!)
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To: 1rudeboy
First off brain power, state schools are state funded, and if you think student tuition pays the cost you are on cloud nine. And the bastardized H-1B’s program need to end, in case you had not notice, brain star, we have millions of Americans out of work.
39 posted on 05/02/2009 7:43:31 PM PDT by org.whodat (Auto unions bad: Machinists union good=Hypocrisy)
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To: Mase
People educated in engineering that have a strong business acumen and exceptional leadership skills will make excellent candidates to run industry.

It is indeed a wonderful education, but a very high fraction of engineering graduates leave the profession fairly rapidly compared to other careers.

40 posted on 05/02/2009 7:58:11 PM PDT by Carry_Okie (It's time to waterboard that teleprompter and find out what it knows.)
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