FeX32 said:
...the MET's courses in Canada are extremely easy compared to a B.Eng. (accredited) program.
I agree 100%. I graduated from a Canadian MET program and then went into university (U Toronto). The courses were like night and day in terms of level of difficulty.
However, I want to emphasize that there is quite a bit of value in an MET diploma. Having that three year diploma has opened doors to me that many (but not all) of my fellow classmates in university did not have access to. I was able to fight off excessive student loan debt through university by doing CAD design & drafting work in the summers and occasionally while in school. Not to mention the practical experience that I was gaining in parallel to my theoretically oriented classes.
The MET programs in Canada are highly practice oriented. In a way, they teach you how to "get the job done" using tried and true methods. Conversely, university programs try to teach students how to think from first principles.
A little over six years ago I was a confused drafter in my early 20's who wasn't quite happy with what I was doing and was hungry for more. I actually stated my case right here on Eng-Tips and received brilliant and life changing advice from some of the posters above.
The example that had the most impact on me at the time was by another Canadian engineer, RDK (still around, Rick? forgive me if I fudge up some details). He had a friend doing a Civil Eng Technology course while he himself was doing Civil Engineering at university. He and his friend were both taking "Strength of Materials" courses with the same name.
The strength of materials exams taken by RDK's friend dealt with rather straightforward problems applying beam calculations from the back-of-the-book.
RDK's exams, on the other hand, involved a question along the lines of "Given the properties of human bone tissue given in table XYZ, and the approximate shape of a tibia bone given in figure ABC, determine the maximum height a 65 kg person could jump from before breaking their tibia." Not very practical, but exactly the sort of thinking that has to be done by someone who is developing something that is new and groundbreaking (no pun intended).
Six years (and a bachelors degree) later, I still find that example to be highly relevant and use it from time to time when speaking to people in colleges asking the same questions I had asked back then.
Bear in mind, this is not necessarily a one way street. A problem facing many universities today is the lack of true practical skills being offered to students. A great deal of students are so inundated with calculus and Diff.Eq's that they can't tell the difference between a drill press and a lathe. I am working with both of my almae matres to set up a special summer program for first year university students (who aren't all that employable anyways) to take some machine shop and drafting classes at the local community college.