TheTick said:
What are the requirements to sit for the PE in your state?
Can you sit for the PE with zero experience?
Can you sit for the PE with zero recommendations from other PEs?
When you and your peers took tests in college, did you have appropriate experience to put your new knowledge into appropriate context to practice engineering in a meaningful way?
Here's one for you:
Two engineers graduate from the same school, same class, and work in the same department at the same company for 10 years. They learn roughly the same things and work on the same types of projects. One decides to sit for the PE exam, one doesn't. They both apply for the same position at a new company. Shall we take a guess as to who will be hired?
They are both obviously very qualified individuals who have plenty of experience (practically the same, mind you), but the PE will win out almost every time. Why? Because he took a test, not because he's any better.
I'm also not a fan of the apparent boys club that's created when a current PE has to vouch for another wishing to become one. What if the new guy is just a complete arsehole with no people skills? He's probably not going to get too many current PEs backing him up, but he may be a damn fine engineer, one now stuck with no one to back him.
While I will concede the PE test shows a minimum level of capability, couldn't one easily argue that's what a university degree does? But PEs have to pay yearly dues and license fees to get/keep their license, again with no guaranteed capabilities beyond those of a university student with experience. That smacks of organized extortion by the state. "Don't pay us
protection fees and you're out of business, buddy."
Dan - Owner