Fatgulfer:
You’ll learn at least as much on the job, or more, than you learned in school. Get with your boss or superior and ask them if they would be your mentor, not just a calc. and plan checker. They will understand, they were in your position once, although they may be frustrated at times that you can’t run twice as fast as you do, at the moment. They want you to learn and succeed, if you shot a bull it can be very costly to them. Show them that you want to learn. When you have a question try to go to them with a bit of thought put into it first, some possible solutions or ideas, or good reasons why it isn’t obvious to you. Get a fairly clean set of plans, and the calcs. and the engineering files that go with those plans, ask the boss for them. Then study them along with the codes and your text books, so you start to understand how they were put together and what thought process went into them. Do a good share of this early learning on your own time, you come to the job (fresh from school) being expected to know some of the fundamentals and basics. Although, you probably never did design a whole bldg. project while in school. Make a list of questions or plan areas/details, etc. that you want to discuss at you next mentor meeting. Once in awhile you buy the beer and pizza to show your appreciation. Ask intelligent questions, not dumb/lazy ones for lack of effort on your part; and you shouldn’t have to ask the same question twice, for obvious reasons. Keep your own notebook of calcs. for various members, conditions, details, etc., along with the reasons why its done that way, for your own edification. Many times the code commentaries are as important as the exact code verbiage in developing an understanding of how and why things are done a certain way. Always read the footnotes in tables, etc., many times they explain what’s confusing you. Start your own ref. library of important (go to) text books, handbooks, codes, etc. which you can mark up they way you want, for your own use. You’ve got two eyes and two ears, and only one mouth, use them in about those same proportions.