OKGeo....A friend of mine was a Professor at McMaster University in Canada. He earned a PhD. and was a practicing consulting engineer (still is) in the Toronto area.
Being a US engineer who went through the entire US process, I asked why they use the process they do in Canada. His reply was that if you were able to graduate with a degree in engineering from one of their engineering school, you had proved your analytical ability. The only left to prove was whether you had the ethical mindset to practice engineering, thus the ethics exam. I good naturedly accused him of academic elitism.
While that process has some plausibility, I am still of the opinion that the internship process in the US is a good one and that practical experience coupled with the academic process is necessary to develop good engineers, a process that takes much longer than 2 years as in Canada or 4 years as in the US.