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[FRC Blog] Want to Work for FRC?
Posted on the FRC Blog, 2/27/15: http://www.usfirst.org/roboticsprogr...o-work-for-frc
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Re: [FRC Blog] Want to Work for FRC?
Can they hold on to the position for four years for me?
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Re: [FRC Blog] Want to Work for FRC?
Agreed
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Re: [FRC Blog] Want to Work for FRC?
I always find this ironic:
My previous work runs important sections of the world's economy and military. Only an Associates degree - can't work for FIRST. For a long, long time, Bill Gates who's company wrote the software that FIRST uses would not qualify for having no Bachelors degree and his current degree is honorary (he has less total time in college class than I do). Well if I ever want to take a huge pay cut: I'll go back to school to qualify for this opportunity. Not to say school is of no value, but I judge the value of the employee to be hired on their demonstrated ability to do their job. It's hard to expect schools to develop curriculum around subjects that companies will find value in, when bleeding edge innovation companies are often so far ahead of the schools and possibly don't want to reduce the resale value of that innovation by making it common place. Last edited by techhelpbb : 27-02-2015 at 17:49. |
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Re: [FRC Blog] Want to Work for FRC?
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Re: [FRC Blog] Want to Work for FRC?
On this note, why does it require an engineering degree? Nothing about the job description screams engineering at me...
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Re: [FRC Blog] Want to Work for FRC?
Dang, I'm two technicalities from qualifying; my degree I'm about to get is a BS in EET from Purdue New Albany, and I'm not sure what they mean as 1 to 5 "industry experience." I may apply anyway...
Edit- never mind, this doesn't seem like what I want to do with my EET degree. It certainly doesn't seem like anything to do with Engineering or Technology. Last edited by ratdude747 : 28-02-2015 at 01:47. |
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Re: [FRC Blog] Want to Work for FRC?
An engineering degree is a kind of experience, and a particularly valuable one at that.
If FIRST says they want someone with the experience of a 4-year engineering program, that's up to them. The job posting also says they desire 1-5 years of industry experience, and that excludes a whole lot of other people (such as myself). If you take a gander at the technical job postings at jobs.google.com and jobs.apple.com, you'll see that the majority say things like "BS in Computer Science or equivalent experience". Some say, "BS/MS is required". And a few say stuff like "PhD + 3 years of industry required". In my random clicking through a couple dozen postings, I only found one that said, "Strong computer science fundamentals required - no matter how you got them." That said, it's quite possible that FIRST would consider strong applicants who demonstrate that they have experience equivalent to an engineering degree. Why not submit your resume and find out? |
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Re: [FRC Blog] Want to Work for FRC?
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In fact the question really becomes increasingly: did your education prepare you to learn faster and solve problems faster than your competitor in any particular situation. I've yet to see a college graduate with a warranty for performance from the school ![]() Word of mouth about your actual work is really the proof you can do the big things people increasingly expect. When you can make your customers/employers acknowledge your work. Then again FIRST doesn't really care whom you employ if you are a vendor. Guess it's the vendor's problem. Certainly did not stop me from proposing a control system and several other things to FIRST. In doing so FIRST got to see my ideas at the early stages while working on the RoboRio. It is interesting actually I have a younger brother: He followed me right up (this was before FIRST existed): Same high school. Same vocational school also a valedictorian in electronics. Same community college. Thing was he went to NJIT and finished the curriculum with a Bachelors. His company at the time even paid for a big chuck of the Bachelors. Meanwhile I picked up 2 extra years of experience. For about 4 years he earned less than me. Took a job at a semiconductor place here, made a little more than me for 4 years (evened it out). Now I make about 4x (base salary only - not my bonus) what he did when the semiconductor place basically failed as a company and switched markets. Over the last few years in fact I managed 2x, then 3x his salary to get to this level of compensation. He's currently looking for work and every place around here wants to pay him less than he was making. There's some luck here and there. Differences in where I spend my spare time. However I actually count my blessings I did not continue down that path myself. There was a very real pattern: the schools catered to the needs of a very specific list of companies. Once those companies had issues the value of the particular set of skills they were teaching became less. I decided I wanted a broader set of skills. Such that I can work in more than a dozen fields professionally. This meant I could navigate around things other people couldn't and had I done that all via college it would have cost a fortune. I never had a single student loan. My brother is a great guy, he'll find work or he will be forced by the circumstances of the education/experience he has to abandon semiconductor work and move to another field. It is interesting though to see the different directions we took from a common point. Last edited by techhelpbb : 28-02-2015 at 03:47. |
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