B16A-
I don't believe it is merely 3 additional semesters of school. That statement has the implicit assumption that all engineering students go to college immediately after high school and at the conclusion of their BS degree have zero to so little responsibility that they can spend and additional 15k - 30k in tuition AND forego a years salary to actually get it done in a single year.
If that were the case, I know I never could have even considered engineering. I worked full time with two kids and a wife while taking SEVEN (7) years to finish my undergrad. To throw another 10-12 classes on that would have easily turned that (7) years into (10). I really believe that could have made the difference in my career path. I also do not believe that I am alone in the journey I took through school.
At the end of the day, none of these requirements are met in a vaccuum. Real life circumstances do get in the way.
Cutting out all of those engineers who didn't take the "traditional" road through college would be left out in the cold and I don't believe we'd be a better profession for that.
I graduated from a very small high school (only 53 in my graduating class) and NO ONE (not my parents, not my guidance counselor, NO ONE) encouraged me to even go to college, let alone advise me of some potential career paths based on my 790 math SAT. I ended up following the same road that every other person from my school takes, which is to finish high school, get a decent job at the local factory, get married and have kids. I had a planned child at 21. That seems absurd to me at this point in my life, but was the reality at the time. Anyway, as I was doing a job that you could train a really dumb monkey to do I was daydreaming about my calculus and physics classes (even four years after high school) and taking time to prove that the area of a circle is pir^2 using double integration and polar coordinates. I started kicking around the idea of going back to school around year 3 of this nightmare of a job, but life circumstances wouldn't allow it at the time. I had a new child to support and my wife didn't work. When my son turned two I made the decision that I could not do this work for the rest of my life. I honestly felt like I was wasting any talent I might have. I ended up enrolling in classes at the "local" community college (it was an hour drive one way), and started off the journey knowing not only that it was going to take a lot longer based on my circumstances, but that it would also be a lot more difficult based on those same circumstances. I took classes at two different community colleges (gen ed) and three different campuses of the university I attended to get done as soon as possible. The drive time from the two farthest campuses I attended was over 3 hours (I point this out only to show it was a serious committment above what typical kids going right from high school could ever imagine). I expected it to take on the order of 6 to 7 years, but if I knew it was going to be 10..... I honestly can't say I would have made the same choice. I might be a math teacher now if it were that way.
The point I'm trying to make is that just because some people can go one extra year after doing 4 doesn't mean that is the reality for everyone. I would hate to think that poor guidance offered to high school kids could prevent them from becoming productive members of this wonderful profession. I truly love what I do. If I could be anything in the world, I would want to be a structural engineer. I know this now, but it wasn't so apparent as a 17 year old kid.
Sorry for the overly long post, I just have really strong feelings about being thought of as a second rate engineer based solely on the fact that I have a BS only or that my degree is in ET and not CE. I take my job very seriously and strive to learn as much as I can as efficiently as I can and really be the best engineer I can possibly be. That should be the mark of a good engineer, not the ability to spend an extra year in grad school right away or having a BSCE instead of a BSET. I mean, at the end of the day, it's what you took out of the classes, not how many of them you had.