Gentlemen,
Engineering, Engineer, Professional. Most of the posts in this forum are only a play of words.
The only ones I agree with are if anyone misrepresents themselves as being a Licenced member of a Professional or Regulatory Body or Association, or by having a Masters in Engineering when in fact they dropped out of high school, then by all means jail them.
Lets not get our knickers in a twist about using the word "engineer". Lots of people use this term and are in no way trying to mislead anyone into believing they are Licenced Professional Engineers.
Am I, in legal or juristictional terms, a Professional Engineer? No. I am however, an Engineering professional by virtue of having 41 years expierience in conveying systems and special purpose machinery. The 41 years encompass the 16 year old "hands on" apprentice, draftsman and then designer or as one post put it, "promoted draftsman".
The title of Mechanical Designer suits me but if I brainchild a piece of machinery which is unique in performing it's fuction, if I choose to do so, I feel I am entitled to say I "Engineered" it.
Another post states something about "not even having attended a regognized School of Engineering". Wake up graduates, when you graduate you know nothing about real world Engineering and I suggest you investigate a crash course on reality.
In contradiction to the beliefs of many Engineers, another post describes "engineering" by the following:
While the definition of "engineering" in our provincial Act is broad (' "engineering means the science and art of designing, investigating, supervising the construction, maintenance or operation of, making specifications, inventories or appraisals of, and consultations or inventories or appraisals or, and consultations or reports on machinery, structures, works, plants, mines, mineral deposits, processes, transportation systems, transmission systems, and communication systems or any other part thereof;" '), our definition of illegal practice are is fairly specific: "...uses verbally or otherwise the title of professional engineer or any abbreviation of such title, or any name, title, description or designation that may LEAD ANY PERSON TO BELIEVE that such person is a professional engineer..."
I think this makes the use of the word "engineer" and the "Illegal" use quite clear.
Sorry if I have came across as being uppity, but for the new grads, I wish you all well, leave the snob factor behind in the hallowed halls, keep your feet on the ground and your head out of the clouds and maybe you can learn a lot from old timers like me. As for the older ones whom I suspect wrote some of these insulting posts, well, what can one say?