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Reversing the Loss of Science and Engineering Careers

walterbyrd writes "In response to the alleged shortages of qualified American engineers and technology professionals, numerous initiatives have been launched to boost interest in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) careers and to strengthen STEM education in the United States. Unfortunately, these programs have not proven successful, and many blame the laziness of modern students, the ineptitude of their teachers, poor parenting or, when there are no other excuses remaining, they may even jump to moral decay as a causative agent. However, the failure of STEM is because the very policies that created the shortages continue unabated. This is not a uniquely American problem. The best way to increase interest in STEM degrees is by making certain that STEM careers are actually viable."

375 comments

  1. Engineering shortage? by hambone142 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't believe there is an engineering shortage in the U.S. If there were, engineer's wages would be increasing. They are not. I work for a very large computer company and wages have been pretty much stagnant for 10 years here. The real "problem" is there is a shortage of cheap engineers. Ones like those in India and China. US companies are hiring overseas like crazy and reducing employee count domestically.

    1. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      this...

      The only way to get a raise these days is to company jump. Oh and watch out for the age barrier.

      If there were a real shortage wages would be increasing to make it more attractive and many older workers would not be passed over.

      Its not the late 90s anymore folks. You will have to make yourself stand out to be hired.

    2. Re:Engineering shortage? by snotclot · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why study engineering?

      1) Hardest course loads through college (excepting perhaps hard sciences and premeds).

      2) No girls in classes (5-14%, falls as engineering major gets harder (ie electrical))

      3) No girls in companies you will end up working at

      4) Facebook friends list is 80% men, most of friends are men. Great if you are networking, crappy if you are trying to network to find the perfect gf/wife. Other majors make balanced set of friends naturally through classes. Their networking, as a result, is exponentially easier.

      5) You end up working at a multinational company that pays you less (much less) than finance, law, BUSINESS. Argh. Note that business, finance, and law types went through the OPPOSITE of #1-#4, meaning they end up knowing way more girls, earning more, and having had a better life.

      6) Yet, you feel as if you contribute way more to society than money movers, patent leeching lawyers, and smoothtalking male/female bimbos/bimbettes.

      You tell ME how f*** up engineering is.

      You ask why I do it? Because I love analysis, creating, designing, and doing.

    3. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't believe there is an unskilled labor shortage in the U.S. If there were, laborers' wages would be increasing. They are not. I work for a very large smartphone factory and wages have been pretty much stagnant for 10 years here. The real "problem" is there is a shortage of cheap laborers. Ones like those in India and China. US companies are hiring overseas like crazy and reducing employee count domestically. FTFY.

    4. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wages don't increase because of the H1-B style programs. Why should they pay us more when they can whine to their bought-politicians and get the limit increased for work visa's?

    5. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It likely depends on the region as well. In the SF bay area, unemployment for software engineers is at an all-time low, while the rest of the job market in the region is one of the highest in the nation.

    6. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Its not the late 90s anymore folks. You will have to make yourself stand out to be hired.

      Or, you can just do what today's smart kids are doing, and avoid the field altogether.

      It's actually a pretty good field if you're a people person, and really like schmoozing and sitting in meetings all day. You just have to struggle through all the hard engineering classes, get an MBA to go with it, then struggle your way through the first few years of work experience as an engineer while you develop your contacts and work your way into management, then work your way up the management ladder. The sky's the limit there; you can go all the way up to CEO if you're a really good schmoozer (though to be CEO of a really big company, you'll probably need a degree from a more prestigious university, but for the lesser companies this isn't necessary, any old MBA will do).

      But if you're a technical person, are not that great at chit-chatting and bullshitting with people while playing golf, don't like sitting in meetings all day, and actually like doing technical work, engineering's not a very good field.

    7. Re:Engineering shortage? by siphonophore · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Geez, go work for a small company. I have about 1 hr of meetings per week and work with my hands (not just typing keys) daily.

      --
      Dance like you're hurt, Love like you need money, and work when somebody's watching.
      -Scott Adams
    8. Re:Engineering shortage? by cpu6502 · · Score: 2

      You forgot the work is boring. Who wants to do a boring job? Good thing I can stream RT.com or radio or audiobooks to take my mind off the mind-numbingly dull work. I tell my family the more boring the job, the more you get paid, because few others want to do it.

      By the way my pay has gone up. It's about 2.3 times larger than in 2001, though it requires moving around the country (no settling-down and raising a family). I'm surprised to hear people say their pay has stagnated.

      >>>Facebook friends list is 80% men

      Aside - Someone actually *criticized* me because most of my facebook friends are girls. I'm sorry but how is that a drawback??? He answered it's probably because I'm stalking women. (sigh). I pointed-out to this induhvidual that my liberal arts college had 2 girls for every guy... hence lots of classmates who are female and still friends today. (He then disappeared.)

      Facebook flamewars are the worst - tons of dummies.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    9. Re:Engineering shortage? by lgw · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There's certainly a shortage of engineers that are US citizens. If your small company can't afford the lawyering for H1-B, greencard, etc, it can really suck to find anyone remotely qualified.

      And at least in software, once you have 5+ years of experience, the field does pay pretty nicely (as long as you keep your skills up to date!). But junior engineers are so much easier to hire abroad for next to nothing, so it sucks to be a US college grad unless you're in the top few % of talent such that the top few % of companies will hire you (Google et al have the budget to overpay for new college grads, and can keep them long enough to benefit from training them - not true of most companies.)

      Back in the days when people actually stayed at companies for a long time (and loyalty went both ways), it was an easy sell to management to take the loss in hiring a junior engineer and training them up, because both the company and the employee would be around long enough to recoup that loss. But now neither is true - unless you have a name like Google, a junior engineer will likely leave as soon as he's not junior, and even if he doesn't there's a good chance the company will go under or be acquired.

      I know it's fashionable to blame the evil corporations for everything, but realistically there's been a structural change in the industry that it hasn't adapted to yet - there's not a model to follow yet! It has always been the successful leading companies in the field that took the hit in training the majority of junior engineers, but today those leaders only do that for a very small slice of top talent, and no one has filled that gap.

      And the fair result may be that being a junior engineer just pays crap, because you're competing in a global market. I think a lot of engineers would be OK with that if US companies would actually make low-wage job offers to US citizens, instead of just blindly looking abroad. Heck, my first development job paid significantly less than a "fresher" in India makes, and I got by! But companies don't seem to do that.

      Even so, you're still much more likely to find employment with a degree with "engineer" in its name than a degree with "studies" in its name.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    10. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      3) No girls in companies you will end up working at

      This isn't true. It depends on the company of course, but in my experience, at the large companies (like Intel), there's tons of women.

      However, 1) all the women in engineering are married, and most of those in arranged marriages (i.e., if you're a white male, you're not even eligible to date them even if they were single; big culture barrier). 2) the rest of the women are in HR, marketing, finance, etc. So you'll see them occasionally in the hallway, or in the company cafeteria, but you won't see them much in your work areas or even your wing of the building. Heck, they might all be in a separate building.

      At the small companies, there might be a few women, but they'll be older and married, and working as the HR person or receptionist or the owner's wife (yes, this was a real position at my first company; I'm not sure what her official title was). That's if you're lucky, lots of small companies don't have any women at all.

      4) Facebook friends list is 80% men, most of friends are men. Great if you are networking, crappy if you are trying to network to find the perfect gf/wife.

      Exactly right. IME, if you're an engineering major, you better make some time in your busy college schedule to find a wife before you graduate. It's just like how people used to say women went to college to get their "MRS degree", except these days it's reversed as there's more girls in college these days than boys. Make sure you pick well and don't get stuck with a girlfriend you end up breaking up with after you've left college and entered the workforce, because suddenly your choices of available single women has dried up.

      6) Yet, you feel as if you contribute way more to society than money movers, patent leeching lawyers, and smoothtalking male/female bimbos/bimbettes.

      Totally disagree. This one completely depends on luck, and maybe a little on your own choices. If you go to a big multinational (since the pay is generally better), chances are very good that whatever project you're working on will be shitcanned because it was a crappy copy of a competitor's product, or it wasn't well planned, or they screwed up execution and "missed the market window", or there was a competing project within the company that got chosen instead, etc. Even if it does get out the door, how well it succeeds in the market is anyone's guess; it might be the next iPhone or Facebook, or it might be the next OS/2, or it might be the next Pontiac Aztek. If you end up working on some revolutionary product that becomes a giant hit and changes the world, count yourself lucky. It's quite likely you'll waste your entire career doing nothing of real note, and nothing you worked on will be remembered by anyone.

    11. Re:Engineering shortage? by siphonophore · · Score: 3, Insightful

      +1 Cathartic

      --
      Dance like you're hurt, Love like you need money, and work when somebody's watching.
      -Scott Adams
    12. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I agree. I work for a small company. No stagnation of pay and tons to do that is interesting. Problem is the numbers if hours...

    13. Re:Engineering shortage? by sr8outtalotech · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's called labor arbitrage, seeking an absolute advantage in labor costs. There aren't that many incentives for a career in STEM fields. These observations are from the SF Bay Area. My friends engineering company started new engineers (EE) out at $40k. Landscapers, maids, postmen, garbage collectors and road crews all make more (get paid for overtime) and they aren't trying to pay off student loans.

    14. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, but when your girlfriend is as much an engineer as you, LIFE ROCKS!

    15. Re:Engineering shortage? by Sir_Sri · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Other than the richest 0.1% of the population who is seeing wage increases these days? It's called the wage productivity gap and basically, everyone who isn't running companies is getting screwed, it's not just engineers. The wealthiest 1%, 0.1% and 0.01% are getting wage increases sure (though more the top 0.1% than 1%, but anyway)

      http://currydemocrats.org/in_perspective/american_pie.html from 2007 and obviously slightly biased but it has a couple of good figures on it. Pay since about 1988 has been significantly decoupling from productivity, and where has it been going? Right, not to the people at the bottom.

      Therein lies the crux of all of the problem for people who aren't in the upper class in the US (and to a lesser extent everywhere else). If you worked more productively you would get more money, but not so much anymore, since someone else will work for less.

      Engineering, and CS are still good programmes (yes, english spelling) to be in, since you still get more money than other fields generally. The other sciences are sort of a crap shoot, if you can't get a PhD, or can't get a technician job they're really bad to have done, but otherwise they can work out ok. The problem is that a construction worker with no education past highschool will make as much as a degree in biology or physics will during say, a post doc, and the scientists will have needed 10 years to get to that point, where the construction worker starts out close to that.

    16. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it's people like you who will continue bring down the wages of engineers. I'm not saying it's a bad thing, just your life decision. Nevertheless you have to admit, you are working in direct OPPOSITION to the market incentives placed before you.

    17. Re:Engineering shortage? by loufoque · · Score: 2

      Some people value science and engineering more than girls.

      It's quite more fulfilling to engineer something than to have sex with a shallow woman.

    18. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It goes further too. Not only is he working in opposition to market forces, but if I were CEO of a company, I would rely on people like that.
      I would rely on people who would stick to engineering regardless of the pay incentives (or lack thereof), in direct opposition to market forces, due to their own personal
      preferences. I could make a mint off these people because they would continue to do the tough engineering work without the necessary pay incentives. I could consistently
      underprice the true value of their skills because they remain in the field due to personal preferences.

    19. Re:Engineering shortage? by misexistentialist · · Score: 2

      Seems like most of those problems can be solved through engineering. A sexbot. For mankind.

    20. Re:Engineering shortage? by Corporate+T00l · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Your #1-4 do certainly match my experience. Your point #5 though doesn't seem to be borne out by the facts.

      The notion that engineering majors make less than finance and business majors isn't borne out by the statistics. Law is an unfair comparison since that's an additional 3 years of expensive professional degree tuition, although their new-graduate employment numbers aren't doing that great.

      Let's compare stats. Here we have have an undergraduate business program, hyped as being in the top 20 undergraduate business programs (pay close attention to the mean base salary and % employment numbers):

      http://dyson.cornell.edu/undergrad/careers.php#placement

      Here we have an undergraduate engineering program, also hyped as being highly ranked, at the same university, for the same year:

      Computer Science: http://www.engineering.cornell.edu/resources/career_services/students/statistics/loader.cfm?csModule=security/getfile&PageID=78827

      Electrical Engineering: http://www.engineering.cornell.edu/resources/career_services/students/statistics/loader.cfm?csModule=security/getfile&PageID=78828

      Now, the business degree majors do have their data updated for 2011, the engineers are only at 2010, but take a look at the 8 year trend reports to satisfy yourself that the numbers are relatively stable:

      http://www.engineering.cornell.edu/resources/career_services/students/statistics/postgrad_reports.cfm

      Undergrad CS majors are making 28% more than the undergrad business majors. Electrical engineers are not doing as well as the CS majors, but still better than the business majors.

      The majority of business majors end up in just as boring and dead-end jobs as the majority of other majors. You can't look at the high-flying business and finance guys on Wall Street and think that those guys are "typical" for business majors any more than you can look at Bill Gates, Gordon Moore, or any of a whole range of tech company CEOs and execs, and think that they are typical engineers.

    21. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Way to miss the point. You're never going to get, working as an engineer at a small company, the kind of pay that you'd get as a middle manager at a large corporation. Plus, your career is over when you're 40; managers don't have to worry about that.

      Of course, the downside is that you do little of value and you sit in meetings all day when you're a manager, but so what? Bring your laptop/smartphone and play games and claim you're answering emails, and then enjoy the cash after work is over (while the engineers you supervise are still hard at work into the evening hours to meet the unrealistic deadlines you set).

    22. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There is no shortage of engineers, but these is a shortage of good engineers. Engineering is a unique field in that often your top engineers can be 10x as productive as a normal engineer. Bad engineers can even cause negative productivity as a whole. Unfortunately, you really can't teach someone to be a good engineer. Being a good engineer is not about learning, but rather problem solving. Making logical connections between bits of information and debugging until a solution is found. I find this ability is usually ingrained in a person rather than taught. It typically shows in how people do at advanced math. Most people with this ability self-select to be engineer and what we don't need is people without this ability going into the engineering field.

      If you have this problem solving ability, engineering is a good way to go. Move to silicon valley and you start at 100k out of college, you will always have a job (likely 2 or 3 offers).

    23. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Informative

      By the way my pay has gone up. It's about 2.3 times larger than in 2001, though it requires moving around the country (no settling-down and raising a family). I'm surprised to hear people say their pay has stagnated.

      It has stagnated. After about 10 years of experience, a typical engineer's pay is frozen. You managed to mitigate that to a certain extent by making certain sacrifices, namely probably being a contractor and moving around a lot. Companies, with their shitty management, are constantly becoming desperate to build headcount for some project or another, so they'll hire a bunch of contractors for 6-12 months to work on that project and then get rid of them. The pay can be very good, plus you don't have that problem where you're pushed to work unpaid overtime to meet unrealistic deadlines (or, if you do work overtime, you get 1.5x pay, so you can really make bank), but the downside is that you're a hired gun with no real roots anywhere and you can't have a family, as you said. The managers you work for don't have this problem; they get to go home at 5PM to their nice house (which you could afford with your pay, but you'd be stupid to buy because you probably won't be living in that city in 2 years) and their family, while you go back to your efficiency apartment or residence inn and play with yourself.

      Aside - Someone actually *criticized* me because most of my facebook friends are girls.

      There's freaks and mental cases anywhere you go. You have to learn to ignore them.

    24. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1, Troll

      I think a lot of engineers would be OK with that if US companies would actually make low-wage job offers to US citizens, instead of just blindly looking abroad. Heck, my first development job paid significantly less than a "fresher" in India makes, and I got by! But companies don't seem to do that.

      They don't do that probably because those junior engineers will start looking for a new job the minute they've signed the paperwork to work for these companies, and as soon as they find something that pays $1/hour more, they're outta there. And for very good reason: a typical college grad these days can expect, thanks to skyrocketing college tuitions and costs, to be $100,000 in debt when they graduate with their BS*E. It's pretty hard to pay back a $100k (or even a $50k) loan, and have money to live on, if you're only getting paid $20k or whatever. It's even worse if the company is in a city that has a higher cost-of-living.

      You mention "freshers" in India; Indian engineers (living in India) are notorious for jumping ship as soon as they get a job offer for slightly more than their current rate.

    25. Re:Engineering shortage? by errhuman · · Score: 1

      Silly, chemical engineers don't know chemistry :P

    26. Re:Engineering shortage? by errhuman · · Score: 1

      Gah, chewed off my "/chemist_troll" html tag

    27. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What would you like the engineers to do? Change careers once they've gone through 4 years of B.Sc, 2 years master, 3 years phd, 1-2 years work experience? To what? Get an mba? Get a JD?

      Yup, you want to work with the market not against it, but your job skills are not transferrable at your whim. Yes, I can write good code; major was EECS. Switching to CS doesn't count as getting out, does it? How about CS for a large bank? Does that count?

      Point is, switching out of engineering, is not difficult 'intelligence-prerequisite-wise' but what would you have the trained engineers do, instead?

    28. Re:Engineering shortage? by frig.neutron · · Score: 1

      wait... so you mean the odds are just like in the real world?

    29. Re:Engineering shortage? by pspahn · · Score: 1

      I thought it was funny the other day when a co-worker commented during a birthday cake 'meeting'.

      It blows me away that I've been here for, what, three months now? And the only time we have meetings is when we eat cake.

      Of course, the trade-off is that people just show up at your desk needing stuff. But it keeps things interesting.

      --
      Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
    30. Re:Engineering shortage? by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

      You could shut this story down after the first post. Companies don't want to raise pay to entice more employees, they want a bargain basement source of IT labor and they're still too gun shy from all the 6 week wonders in the DotCom era.

      --
      I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
    31. Re:Engineering shortage? by MattW · · Score: 4, Informative

      Plus, your career is over when you're 40

      I am on a team with 9 software engineers, not counting QE. 4 of the team members are definitely older than 40 (I believe one is now in his late 50s/early 60s even), and two others are in our mid-30s. No one is under 30.

      Then again, all the managers I've had here have been badasses who make huge contributions to getting good stuff out the door, too.

    32. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Um, no? In other industries, you're likely to have plenty of female coworkers.

    33. Re:Engineering shortage? by pspahn · · Score: 1

      It's almost like you RTFS. Shortage of STEM workers? They all decided to go to management because it was easier.

      Thank $diety there are still a few people around who enjoy building things and creating new innovations.

      --
      Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
    34. Re:Engineering shortage? by snowraver1 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Uhh, I believe you are thinking of geologists.

      --
      Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. This comment may not be copied in any way including, but not limited to caching.
    35. Re:Engineering shortage? by supertall · · Score: 1

      It's quite likely you'll waste your entire career doing nothing of real note, and nothing you worked on will be remembered by anyone.

      This. A lot of the engineering work out there is boring as hell, and if you do manage to latch on to an exciting project there's a good chance that fact will be held over your head like a carrot on a stick to distract you from the whippings. I've been lucky to work on many relatively exciting projects, but have been on the turd projects as well. It doesn't feel good.

    36. Re:Engineering shortage? by ace37 · · Score: 1

      Actually, an MBA and a JD are ways to get a lot more money...
      MBA+BS or MS in engineering --> PM (i.e. engineer's boss) with options to go up the VP train towards CTO.
      JD+BS in engineering --> patent lawyer, and they make a lot of money.

      Problem is, both of those jobs sound boring to me. So I stick with Aerospace.

    37. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You can build stuff when you're a manager too; just do it in your spare time after work, while all your engineers are slaving away late into the night to meet your unrealistic deadlines. While you're getting to work in your spare time on a project you enjoy and picked yourself, all those engineers are slaving away on some BS project they don't care about, that they had no hand in creating, and only picked because they needed a job to pay their student loans. And you can laugh at them for patting themselves on the back for willingly going into a profession where they can be paid poorly (compared to the educational costs and difficulty of completing the degree) and then get laid off when they're 40 because they're "too old".

    38. Re:Engineering shortage? by trout007 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      This is really a symptom of our monetary system. With the federal reserve and fiat fractional reserve banking system you can make more money in finance because you can literally create money. It's no wonder the people given the privilege of making money by flipping bits on a computer are rich. In a hard money 100% reserve system the miners and mints would create the money. These are engineers and techs.

      The system we have now is designed to steal wealth from productive people and transfer it to the privileged class. Tax rates don't matter when you allow people to create money out of thin air. They will always be rich.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    39. Re:Engineering shortage? by khallow · · Score: 1

      Other than the richest 0.1% of the population who is seeing wage increases these days?

      They might be doing well now, but they were taking a bath back during the financial crisis before the bailouts. They probably aren't seeing wage increases either, but they are far less dependent on wages (being rich).

    40. Re:Engineering shortage? by Koby77 · · Score: 1

      A generation ago, a relative of mine was told that the Sciences were the way to go. Be a chemist and he'll have a high paying job for life, so that's what he chose for his career path. Decades later, realty proves it turned out to be quite a lie. As usual, the market forces work, and until STEM jobs start making significantly larger sums of money and have more job security, I can't blame this generation for ignoring the management call that we need more dummies to flood the market while they continue to receive higher pay.

    41. Re:Engineering shortage? by hoggoth · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You can, you know, have sex with an awesome interesting woman instead.

      --
      - For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat /dev/random (may take some time)
    42. Re:Engineering shortage? by Tooke · · Score: 1

      It's quite likely you'll waste your entire career doing nothing of real note, and nothing you worked on will be remembered by anyone.

      Hearing things like this is one of the reasons I want to work in a startup after I get my CS degree. I know a lot of people recommend against the idea, e.g. saying how you'll use all your savings, the startup will fail, you'll save up some more, and the process repeats over and over again. Perhaps I'm naive, but I just don't care. I've heard so much about how crappy jobs are that I don't know if I could take it. That, and I've read so much of Paul Graham's writings that I'm probably indoctrinated. I just hope that I can pull it off. It'd be a dream come true to not have to worry about making a living, then I could spend my time playing clarinet and writing OSS. But in the mean time, I suppose I'll just keep studying...

      --
      Anybody want a peanut?
    43. Re:Engineering shortage? by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Go for it. Startups or small companies. Much more control of your own destiny, creative freedom etc etc.

      There's always time to rot in the corner at a huge corporation later.

    44. Re:Engineering shortage? by real+gumby · · Score: 1

      2) No girls in classes (5-14%, falls as engineering major gets harder (ie electrical))

      Really? At MIT, course 6 (i.e. EECS) I think the F:M ratio is still higher on the EE side than CS -- certainly was when I was there. Course 2 (ME) was close to 50:50 at the time. And I seem to remember that chem E was majority F.

      And the default major, 18 (math) was mostly men.

      It's been a while since I really bothered to notice this in detail, but I'd have heard if this had changed much.

    45. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      It probably wasn't a lie when he was told that; he was just at the tail end of when it remained true. A generation from now, maybe STEM jobs will be better careers, but there's no way to know that now, and young people choosing a profession always look at what that profession is like currently, so even if the situation changes, it takes a long time for the workforce to catch up.

    46. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Startups are a basically a big gamble. You might get rich, you probably won't though. However, the pay is an important factor for most students; of course, this depends on exactly how much you're offered, but if the pay isn't at least decent, for most students that's a non-starter because they have enormous student loans that need to be repaid. But if the pay's good enough, the work is interesting, and you think the company has a good chance of prospering, it can be a worthwhile gamble while you're still young and single.

    47. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, please no. The financial industry is messed up and desperately in need of reform and better regulations. Getting rid of fiat currency is not at all the right way to do so. Fractional reserve banking is (1) not evil (although it can be overdone) and (2) does not require fiat currency.

      A major problem with non-fiat currencies is that there simply is more wealth than precious metals, so you can't represent all of the world's wealth in precious metals. The result is necessarily deflationary. Also, you get people wasting their time mining which has no intrinsic value (at least Wall St. is creating liquidity and market signals... just poorly).

    48. Re:Engineering shortage? by CodingHero · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Your posts of:

      Or, you can just do what today's smart kids are doing, and avoid the field altogether.

      and

      Way to miss the point. You're never going to get, working as an engineer at a small company, the kind of pay that you'd get as a middle manager at a large corporation. Plus, your career is over when you're 40; managers don't have to worry about that.

      Of course, the downside is that you do little of value and you sit in meetings all day when you're a manager, but so what? Bring your laptop/smartphone and play games and claim you're answering emails, and then enjoy the cash after work is over (while the engineers you supervise are still hard at work into the evening hours to meet the unrealistic deadlines you set).

      make me feel like you are an engineer who has somehow become embittered with the profession. I'm sure you have a reason you feel the way you do but I work as an engineer at a small company with around 20 other engineers and none of any age are nearly this cynical about it. As previous posts have mentioned, engineering classes are hard, there's no girls, and you probably will never get the respect you deserve from the rest of society, but we do it because we love it. To be successful as an engineer requires that you enjoy what you're doing. Once you stop enjoying it, then it's time to move on. Keep in mind here that "successful" does not necessarily equal "high pay" or "upper management" position; many would define it as having a job where they don't actually feel like they are going to work.

    49. Re:Engineering shortage? by CodingHero · · Score: 1

      You forgot the work is boring.

      There's certainly a fair share of "boring" engineering work but a lot of it is not. We all have days where nothing goes right, where we're stuck writing a long boring report, or in a meeting, but when you get that final working product at the end of it all, it makes it all worth it. Maybe I just haven't been in the field long enough, but, overall, the work is far from "boring."

      If, however, by boring you mean from the viewpoint of, say, my mom, well then sure.

    50. Re:Engineering shortage? by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      Being rich exposes you to much more volatility in your net worth, no doubt. But as you say, when you're rich you can handle the fluctuations better.

      They've also seen huge wage growth proportionately in the last 30 years, and they had this bizare blip in average income from around 2000 -2002 which bounced way back up, so they may be back where they were in 2000 as a percent of total income, although with the general wage declines it's harder to know (note, that's on the chart I linked before, it's just kinda hard to see, the same figures seem to be http://acivilamericandebate.wordpress.com/2011/04/10/the-30-year-growth-of-income-inequality with a couple of other images).

      Unfortunately I can't find figures for post 2007, which isn't a huge surprise.

    51. Re:Engineering shortage? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      Of course, the trade-off is that people just show up at your desk needing stuff. But it keeps things interesting.

      I find they do this in large companies too, the only difference is you're frequently in other meetings when they stop by.

    52. Re:Engineering shortage? by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

      That's because of where the manufacturing jobs have gone. Technical jobs go where industry goes, because most technology is in the service of industry.

    53. Re:Engineering shortage? by Teancum · · Score: 2

      A major problem with non-fiat currencies is that there simply is more wealth than precious metals, so you can't represent all of the world's wealth in precious metals. The result is necessarily deflationary. Also, you get people wasting their time mining which has no intrinsic value (at least Wall St. is creating liquidity and market signals... just poorly).

      I disagree with this statement, but I would argue that this is closer to the truth. The main issue with using precious metals as a currency base is that you can put those metals to work with another currency system that doesn't use precious metals more efficiently (aka use copper, silver, and gold as industrial materials rather than as a currency) and on the whole allows those materials to float based on real supply and demand rather than merely because it is the currency itself.

      What I completely disagree with though is the notion that deflation is necessarily a bad thing. It is bad for some bankers and the presumption that you must borrow money from some central organization in order to grow your business or finance a home, but for ordinary consumers and businesses which aren't in the financial services sector it really isn't necessarily a bad thing. The worst part right now is that the economies and financial structures of the world are geared to the presumption that inflation is inevitable.

      Regardless, if gold-backed currencies came back into vogue, the value of those metals would rise to reflect true wealth from around the world.

    54. Re:Engineering shortage? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      This is true, but is it enough to make it worthwhile? A CEO I recall was saying "Hey go to engineering, we have lower unemployment and 25% higher salaries". If I knew in college what I know now, I'm pretty sure that alone would have made me follow mom's advice and be a doctor.

    55. Re:Engineering shortage? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      I'm under the impression that MIT admissions does a lot to try to balance things out. They're in the enviable position of selecting the absolute best of the best, no matter how they split the deck, and from what I've heard from alumni, they're fairly serious about diversity.

    56. Re:Engineering shortage? by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

      Why study engineering?

      1) Hardest course loads through college (excepting perhaps hard sciences and premeds).

      I used to think that until I took an upper-division history course. KICKED * MY * ASS

      Engineers are used to reading a little, understanding a few conceptually relatively simple concepts and then exploring the complex and myriad ways those concepts can be applied to solve practical problems.

      Liberal arts students are used to reading or skimming massive volumes of written material, sometimes densely packed with information, sensing the overall tone, organizing the information into a structure that allows some reasonable fraction of it to be remembered, and showing up for class and exams ready to discuss or write about it in convincing detail.

      2) No girls in classes (5-14%, falls as engineering major gets harder (ie electrical))
       

      But if you're one of those girls, you have your pick of the boys on campus who are most likely to amount to something.

    57. Re:Engineering shortage? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      This is truer than people reailize. I interviewed for my present employer twice. The first time they offered me a wage way, way below what I was asking and making, but which represented the mid-line pay for a particular pay-grade. I told them to go fish. They call me back 3 months later, immediately after the H1-B application window was filled up in early april, reinterview. Suddenly I get what I'm asking.

      The question is why I accepted the second time... it was still the best alternative available.

    58. Re:Engineering shortage? by trevelyon · · Score: 1

      I will take being a doer over a talker any day of the week. Even if it means I have to take a hit in pay. That said I've never really struggled that much with getting enough clients to keep myself busy. Like many others have said small business is much more rewarding than big business. Then again if you are only in it for the money I probably don't want you working for me anyway. Just my take on things,

    59. Re:Engineering shortage? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry but I haven't noticed companies looking for good engineers, or using them well when they have them. I've seen them looking for CHEAP engineers.

    60. Re:Engineering shortage? by superflit · · Score: 1

      This was not the point in fighting the H1B visas?

      Reduce competition here?

      Well they just moved the jobs to where 'cheap' engineers are....but now they do not pay taxes in US...

      smart uh?

    61. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Clients"? If you have clients, then you're probably not an engineer, but a businessman (who does engineering). There's a bit of a difference. It also means you're a talker; you can't get clients without talking to them at some point, instead of sitting in a cubicle or in a manufacturing facility and doing engineering work and only interacting with coworker engineers and your manager; dealing with customers is a whole different animal.

      There's nothing in engineering school that prepares you for going into business; you have to go take some business courses on the side for that. And by running a business, you have much less time to do actual engineering work. Nothing wrong with that, but you can't really call yourself a full-time engineer if you're not engineering full-time. More importantly, all these businesses and politicians screaming for more engineers aren't looking for people who want to start their own small business ASAP, they're looking for people to be workers in big corporations.

    62. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's certainly a shortage of engineers that are US citizens. If your small company can't afford the lawyering for H1-B, greencard, etc, it can really suck to find anyone remotely qualified.

      Is that how it is on the coasts? In the Midwest, the opposite is true - I worked for a small company where I hired four people, all US citizens, and (IIRC) of the 20-40 resumes I looked at only one of them was an H1-B.

    63. Re:Engineering shortage? by jank1887 · · Score: 1

      yeah, but this is about science and engineering. not IT.

    64. Re:Engineering shortage? by jank1887 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      sure I'm gonna burn some karma here, but I'm always entertained by the fact that when articles mention science and engineering, the majority of the comments are about computers, software and IT. That is but a small subset of engineering (well, if you consider IT part of it at all). The majority of engineering deals in some way with the physical world. And they've generally fared much better in the economic downturn (I've seen numbers ranging from a third to a half of the general unemployment rate), mainly because of the 'shortage'. or, at least, lack of excess.

    65. Re:Engineering shortage? by Benaiah · · Score: 3, Informative

      You should check out the Hays salary guide for Australian engineers. An Senior Engineer commands a $200K salary over here, and as you can guess we have record numbers of engineers at university.

    66. Re:Engineering shortage? by trevelyon · · Score: 2

      Well, I don't know about that so much. After all most engineers interface with clients to determine needs and create specs for what they are going to do. I do do a bit of selling some ideas but having worked on big projects that really does go on in the teams anyway at least from my experience. Considering the bulk of my time (75+%) is designing and implementing the technical solutions I still consider myself an engineer, I do IT (networking, servers, policies, etc) so not sure if you consider that engineering or not. I can't really see doing the job with much less interaction but then again most of my clients now are small to medium businesses so I do everything from architecting the solution to implementing and documenting it.

      As for me being the kind of person big companies want to hire full time that depends. Like one of the parents or GPs said though most of the big companies want cheaper labor for full time and I like the contracting role anyway. More change and challenges as well as a wider variety of experience.

    67. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Complaining about the lack of girls, on Slashdot? Wrong place my friend.

    68. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about after 5 years, when the engineers have made Senior Engineer while the business guy has made Director?
      And 10... Lead Engineer vs VP.
      15... Principle Engineer vs SVP/C-level.

    69. Re:Engineering shortage? by EuclideanSilence · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You don't need a commodity based currency.

      You just need to tell the Federal Reserve to stop loaning out money altogether. The only thing they should be doing is 1:1 exchanges of US currencies (dollars to cents), and only printing to replace damaged currency. There shouldn't be more units of money in existence now than there was 100 years ago. The extra is going into the Federal Reserve's rich friends (sometimes called "investors", often overseas) pockets, a little bit at a time to a few people.

      We could at least start with auditing the Federal Reserve.

      What I completely disagree with though is the notion that deflation is necessarily a bad thing. It is bad for some bankers and the presumption that you must borrow money from some central organization in order to grow your business or finance a home, but for ordinary consumers and businesses which aren't in the financial services sector it really isn't necessarily a bad thing. The worst part right now is that the economies and financial structures of the world are geared to the presumption that inflation is inevitable.

      Regardless, if gold-backed currencies came back into vogue, the value of those metals would rise to reflect true wealth from around the world.

      I see deflation as a result of a more efficient economy. When technology makes it cheaper to create bread, the value of currency should deflate in relation to that. It's like you had 100 loafs of bread stored in the bank, and now you have 200 because better technology makes it possible for the same time investment of work. In the short term, most technology improvements are difficult to cope with, they require people to change their outlook on things. This is what is reflected in most "deflation is bad" arguments. But those who only see short term results will suffer long term consequences.

      All in all, with the technology improvements we've had in the last hundred years, our currency should have deflated tremendously, maybe even 100 or 1000 times. The interesting question then becomes, "where did all the extra money go?"

    70. Re:Engineering shortage? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Money/wealth is just a metric by which to measure the difference of importance of what a person can offer society. It's a number by which to assign social value. When you buy and sell, what you're really doing is agreeing upon "attention". Be this an actual product, service, or pure time. It's precisely this why the more social personalities tend to make more money. Be it in entertainment, sales, marketing, or finance. The reason for this goes back to the core element of human nature. In modern terms, we are attempting to quantify that and assign universal fluidity to it. By any other name it's called money.

      If you managed to parse what I've just said, you can now understand why deflation is a good thing. It brings people closer to equal footing without huge gaps in wealth inequalities. Make everyone the same value however, and no much will get done in the way of productivity. There's a happy medium somewhere.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    71. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like Dilbert.

    72. Re:Engineering shortage? by mpfife · · Score: 2
      I think you made a fair assessment from my experience. One addition/correction I would add - and it's a big one.

      Finding *qualified* candidates is the key phrase. We get lots of interviews from recent graduates, but many of us lament at how bad a great number of them are. The ones that went to U of Pheonix or other trade schools are just not suitable as systems coders (jobs we pay very well for). I don't know if it's universities failing to educate, or standards going up. I would guess a little of both. We need device driver writers, multithreaded system programers, graphics, etc, and it's very hard to find event experienced coders that are good at that. Most fail our screenings. It's not good enough anymore just to show up with a sheepskin in CS. You need to demonstrate you can actually build and debug something. For candidates that show initiative with personal projects and can demonstrate solid coding/debugging and can talk intelligently about architecture - we'll hire you in a MINUTE with some of the highest salaries in the industry. If you can't, then you're one of the 10,000 other global coders anyone can get. We do hiring lots of promising newbies all the time - but they have to show that initial spark and understanding at least. You can't just show up and be gimme a job cause I got a diploma.

      I think this brings us to a great career point. You don't want to be floating in the middle as one of the masses in engineering - following just the trend lines. Sure, you need relevant skills so don't run out and become the ADA expert; but perhaps an example. If you were a Java/web coder in the very early 2000's when the bubble popped - a great number of those people never found work again and left the field. I felt bad for all the CS grads from my school that had just taught them Java (they don't know, they primarily teach C/C++ again and now we hire them). Unfortunately, when you're part of the big crowd, you're career and pay is driven much by the crowd and you must be really, really exceptional to stand out.

      What will make you OODLES of money in engineering is being a master of certain much needed, but not well peopled, technique. I knew several guys that were above average coders but commanded insane amounts of money to come in and deliver a certain kind of feature. They went the contracting themselves out route and simply re-regurgitated the 1 of the 5 or so techniques they had implemented for this task really well, picked up a fat check, wash, rinse and repeat. I know personally of at least 2 different sets of people doing this with 2 completely different technologies. Sure, every year or two needed to spend some time updating and revamping the codebase, but they worked about 2-3 jobs a year and then took 3-6 mo off - and made large 6-figure salaries. Those are the people that get rich in engineering. You simply won't get rich working for a company unless you've got some kind of share of the sales.

      So it is possible to get a job even as a new grad, but you need to stand out more now than before.

    73. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank the lord for nurses and engineers parties and balls. Nursing being the female equivalent to engineering in terms of percentage of gender.

    74. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with your points about #6

      However, when I talk about women, I specifically refer to single women / dateable women are are not married / middle aged / in HR. I'm talking about women you get to interact with on a daily basis; ie on your team or group.

    75. Re:Engineering shortage? by thegarbz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Way to miss the point. You're never going to get, working as an engineer at a small company, the kind of pay that you'd get as a middle manager at a large corporation. Plus, your career is over when you're 40

      Err what the? Actually all the engineers over 40 I know are private contractors, many have their own contracting firms with just one employee, themselves. Those guys are absolutely rolling in the cash. 25+ years experience in an industry, as long as your a chartered engineer or otherwise certified that's when you have literally limitless opportunities. You're a specialist? Even more so.

    76. Re:Engineering shortage? by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Yeah like oil and gas. Sure you're not going to find many engineers in an R&D / technology company, most of the female engineers are drawn to degrees such as environmental engineering or chemical engineering. I work for a large oil and gas company and I would say the mechanical department is 50:50, my electrical department is 100% male, and the chemical / process departments are 80% female.

    77. Re:Engineering shortage? by treeves · · Score: 1

      "... falls as engineering major gets harder (ie electrical)"

      Disagree with this, at least relative to chemical engineering. I don't think that ChE is "easier" than EE. Although EE is probably "harder" than ME or Civil Eng. And there were more girls in ChE than all other engineering majors when I was in school.
      The "no girls in companies where you work" is pretty true though, and it can be a bummer. But then it's probably best to avoid romantic relationships with co-workers anyways, so that makes it easier!

      --
      ...the future crusty old bastards are already drinking the Kool-Aid.
    78. Re:Engineering shortage? by rwa2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why study engineering?
      1) Hardest course loads through college (excepting perhaps hard sciences and premeds).

      Yep, I enjoyed the challenge. Actually took quite a few extra honors options that I didn't technically need to, and enrolled in a bunch of pretty difficult electives for the heck of it. Yes, I also failed / withdrew / incompleted some of them... over a few rough semesters I managed to collect one of every possible grade... but really, where else can you explore your limits? I didn't get into a hard school just to try to skirt by with the bare minimum easy classes and avoid all the challenging courses and professors. Besides, no one has ever asked for a transcript (maybe if I went the academic route grades would be important)

      2) No girls in classes (5-14%, falls as engineering major gets harder (ie electrical))

      Wish this would increase... but at least the girls that are there can be super nerdy++, which is a turn-on for some of us . Besides, this is a plus if you already have a gf from HS like I did. Can be tricky, since you can't really count on girls and relationships to mature until after college. I suppose I lucked out (esp. since my gf/wife ended up financing my last semester of college).

      But yeah, unless you get lucky with project teams, chances of finding love on the engineering quad are slim. However, a lot of our professional engineering societies were pretty much run almost exclusively by women... even the Society of Women Engineers wasn't sexist about letting guys join in if you get really desperate. Also, there are usually plenty of girls in classes / clubs like ballroom dancing who dig science / engineering types (particularly the foreign girls)... because face it, you don't really want to be talking to your gf about problem sets all the time.

      3) No girls in companies you will end up working at

      Given how much trouble people get into for shitting where they eat, this is probably a plus.

      4) Facebook friends list is 80% men, most of friends are men. Great if you are networking, crappy if you are trying to network to find the perfect gf/wife. Other majors make balanced set of friends naturally through classes. Their networking, as a result, is exponentially easier.

      Get a gf/wife in education, then their social sphere is the exact opposite, and you have achieved balance. Plus then your SO can have all her hot teacher friends over and you can impress them with your... whatever. (Teacher friends are easily impressed, or at least do a great job being super friendly about it even if they aren't.) Also you get to constantly play hookup master with all of your respective friends. (not recommended with friends you want to keep, but entertaining nonetheless)

      5) You end up working at a multinational company that pays you less (much less) than finance, law, BUSINESS. Argh. Note that business, finance, and law types went through the OPPOSITE of #1-#4, meaning they end up knowing way more girls, earning more, and having had a better life.

      Yeah, but those people are sleazy looking. Also you feel better when you find out they're all indirect overhead and the first on the chopping block when it's time to tighten belts.

      6) Yet, you feel as if you contribute way more to society than money movers, patent leeching lawyers, and smoothtalking male/female bimbos/bimbettes.

      Heh, yeah, people who make money out of money are in it just as long as other people buy into their bluff. But when it hits the fan, the resourceful ones with the ability will still be... working. Woo. At least it's something that will always have value, and not just evaporate.

      You tell ME how f*** up engineering is.
      You ask why I do it? Because I love analysis, creating, designing, and doing.

      And some people's life goal is to be able to go shopping on som

    79. Re:Engineering shortage? by Hognoxious · · Score: 2

      "Customers"? If you have customers, then you're probably not a [plumber|tailor|baker], but a businessman (who does [plumbing|tailoring|baking]).

      Sounds even more stupid when you put it like that, doesn't it?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    80. Re:Engineering shortage? by reason · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think the parent comment's point in saying "your career is over when you're 40" is that at 40, you have reached the top of your career ladder unless you move into management (in a large corporation).

      I'm in science role, and at 38, have reached this point myself. I am in a large corporation, and have started the shift into management, though it isn't something I'm particularly good at or particularly enjoy. In the context of a large organisation, a 45 year old who has avoided management roles is likely to be perceived in some quarters as a failure, and may be first in line for redundancy when the next downturn hits.

    81. Re:Engineering shortage? by reason · · Score: 1

      You're assuming that the people reading your post and who might be considering becoming engineers are male.With this as the constant baseline assumption, is it any wonder that women turn away from the field?

    82. Re:Engineering shortage? by jandersen · · Score: 1

      The real "problem" is there is a shortage of cheap engineers

      That may be part of it, but I think we have to look at a much wider picture. I work for an international SW company, with development both in the US, UK and India (among others), and what I see clearly is that in India, engineers get hired and then promoted fairly rapidly, like every two years or so, whereas in UK and America this doesn't happen: you are hired, and then you are dead in the water.

      I think what is really lacking in the west is career plans/-paths for engineers. Our managers are simply not good enough at developing their staff and focus only on holding costs down - the only way you can get promioted or get a raise is by changing job, so our companies lose their good staff and find it really hard to replace them with what is left out there.

      I don't think this is about the price of engineers - unless the companies are broke, they are all able and willing to pay for really good engineers, but once they're in the house, the managers have no clue about how to improve them.

    83. Re:Engineering shortage? by reason · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I took a few humanities courses (two units of philosophy, one of politics and one of sociology) during my science degree. The science courses had about twice the "contact hours" as the humanities courses, due to lab classes, but the reading and writing workload of the humanities courses far outweighed that of the science, maths and computing courses, so the overall workload was higher on the humanities side.

      A caveat is that I took my studies very seriously... things might look different for a student set on skimming through and doing the minimum for a pass grade.

    84. Re:Engineering shortage? by reason · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up.

      I know a couple of people in CS and programming who have done very well for themselves in just this way: being one of one or two people in the country with a particular specialised skill set. One made a good call on getting into a field just before it exploded; the other did quite the reverse, and held onto coding skills relevant to legacy systems that many corporations still rely upon (and will for years to come), using a niche programming language that fell out of favour two decades ago.

    85. Re:Engineering shortage? by kikito · · Score: 2

      "They will always be rich."

      Historically, this is not what happens. The differences between rich and poor increase over time. When the differences are big enough, the majority of poor rebels and kills the minority of rich (which have paid armies on their side, so it is usually a bloodbath).

      Then the few people that remain says "we'll do it better this time!" and they start the cycle again.

    86. Re:Engineering shortage? by trout007 · · Score: 1

      It's not like I came up with precious metals as money. Those have been agreed upon as money by billions of people making free choices. This is mostly because money is more efficient than barter. Most things have value because people make free choices in exchange. Fiat currency only has value because of legal tender laws. Fractional reserve banking only exists because of things like the FDIC and other laws that lull people into keeping their money in insolvent banks. Without those laws it would be considered fraud.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    87. Re:Engineering shortage? by YeeHaW_Jelte · · Score: 2

      While I agree with your point about wage differences between management and engineers (or in my case, programmers) I think you're just being bitter here.

      Without proper management, most engineers would be inventing the wheel each and every day again. Or dreaming up solutions independantly that do not match up in the larger picture. Or would just be slacking off themselves because no one is applauding their work.

      Management does have a legitimate role, you know. Your failure to recognize this is probably your biggest hindrance for your career, even if the particular company you are working for now does have a topheavy management culture.

      You need to appreciate and recognize the proper organization of a company before you can find one that functions like so and will allow you to function happily instead of bitterly ranting away on slashdot.

      --

      ---
      "The chances of a demonic possession spreading are remote -- relax."
    88. Re:Engineering shortage? by Mithent · · Score: 1

      You're never going to get, working as an engineer at a small company, the kind of pay that you'd get as a middle manager at a large corporation.

      Nope. Unfortunately, you're not going to get the kind of pay you'll get in management in any job where you do the practical work. If that's what you enjoy doing, then you have to accept the trade-off of lower pay for greater job satisfaction/enjoyment. I'd like it to be different, but that's the reality.

      I'd say that your best bet is probably to be in a company that's focused around your job role rather than being an ancillary part of some other corporation. If you're a programmer, a software company is more likely to understand the value that you add than a grocery store? I could well be wrong about that, though.

    89. Re:Engineering shortage? by hism · · Score: 1

      So what if there's no girls in my major? It is possible to interact with people outside of your studies. If anything it brings a healthy balance to your life.

    90. Re:Engineering shortage? by flyneye · · Score: 1

      The real problem is Modern Public Education. We reap what we sow and the first harvests are coming in.
      Scientists and Engineers? No, no, no, we have rap stars, gangstas, artists, philosophers and other vocations encouraged by the nurture of "special feelings" by the NEA. Here in America we do it " for the children" because they are the future. We wouldn't want them to be sad or feel like failures, so we don't pressure them. That way they can grow and an education be facilitated. Not to worry, grownups will take care of those serious things like science and math. Kids , you just work on being kids and let your imaginations carry you to the future....

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    91. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is the US citizens would prefer to rent their own room if not apartment. The cheap workers are sharing rooms and apartments.

    92. Re:Engineering shortage? by shiftless · · Score: 1

      You're never going to get, working as an engineer at a small company, the kind of pay that you'd get as a middle manager at a large corporation.

      Or you could, you know...start your OWN COMPANY and collect all the pay you want. Of course, then you would have to take responsibility for all kinds of things. It's much easier just to sit in your cubicle on slashdot and bitch about how hard life is.

    93. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks, I'll take 60k in the heartland for an effectively higher salary and better hours. Your opinions are are ridiculous and borne by zero evidence,except what you have fabricated in your internal fantasies. You = forever alone. Go code some web 2.0 tripe, you web lackey.

    94. Re:Engineering shortage? by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      Private contracting by yourself? That does require some skill at marketing yourself, which is something that not every nerd has.
      Fortunately, there are also larger contracting firms which actually hire engineers to use them in customer projects. At the age of 45 I'm working for one of those myself (in Germany). The pay does not reach the level of the guys you described, but is reasonable for a "normal" employee. Which you are if you work for one of those larger contracting firms.

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    95. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At MIT, course 6 (i.e. EECS) I think the F:M ratio is still higher on the EE side than CS -- certainly was when I was there. Course 2 (ME) was close to 50:50 at the time

      And this is why I didn't go to MIT: majors aren't called what they really are; they're just numbers. Courses are just numbers, the rooms are just numbers, the buildings are just numbers. You can introduce yourself to another student and compare your entire college career, start to finish, with just... numbers.

    96. Re:Engineering shortage? by rve · · Score: 1

      Why would an H1-B bring wages down? Why would a skilled migrant work for substantially less than a native with the same qualifications? Sure, it's going be somewhat lower because your visa depends on a specific contract with a specific employer (meaning: if you get laid off, you also get deported), but if one potential employer is offering substantially less than another, he's going to have to settle with less qualified people to do the work.

    97. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      at the large companies (like Intel), there's tons of women.

      Sitting around at a computer all day eating potato chips and drinking cola does that to women.

    98. Re:Engineering shortage? by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      Are you talking about computer/software "engineers" or REAL engineers? There's a difference, you know.

    99. Re:Engineering shortage? by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      Of course, and it happens a lot. In other fields too BTW (e. g., being a young teacher in Germany pays not so well. Beyond 40 things look much better due to the nice benefits).
      But recently, it seems there are not enough of those idealists to make all greedy CEOs happy. Hence the alleged shortages quoted in the submission.

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    100. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a female (software) engineer, I find it creepy that your primary work complaint is the lack of women to hit on.

    101. Re:Engineering shortage? by BVis · · Score: 1

      You answered your question in the first sentence with your third sentence. H1-Bs can be paid less because they're basically being held hostage by the company that employs them, and that brings EVERYONE'S wages down.

      --
      Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
    102. Re:Engineering shortage? by flirno · · Score: 2

      This entirely depends on the company and the culture it fosters. I currently work at one that has competency barries not age barriers. I work with a lot of people older than I am and some devs and engineers are well into their late 50s.

    103. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There shouldn't be more units of money in existence now than there was 100 years ago.

      What principle argues 'the usefulness of money is proportional to its scarcity'? The same principles force one to argue "There shouldn't be more fucking now, then there was 100 years ago". Of course, since the population increased by 100 million people during the intervening century, you will happily die a virgin so that some arbitrary level of 'usefulness' can be achieved.

      The purpose of money is prevent the resource imbalance caused by buying a loaf of bread with a goat/horse/daughter. Obviously we want stability in the process so that a loaf which costs $2 today doesn't cost $5 tomorrow (inflation). Demanding a higher 'usefulness' from a medium of exchange defeats its purpose.

    104. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up. This is the first time I've seen this mentioned in this thread; I had been looking for a place to reply with this exact thought.

      There isn't a shortage of talented engineers, there's a shortage of talented engineers that will take junior pay. Everyone wants rock stars but they want to pay peanuts. You know what they say: You pay peanuts, and you get monkeys. Pay people what they're worth or better (in terms of total compensation, I'm mostly thinking of health insurance in our ass backwards system that ties health coverage to employment), and the talented candidates will beat a path to your door.

    105. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You can, you know, have sex with an awesome interesting woman instead.

      For certain values of "you" that do not include most Slashdot readers.

    106. Re:Engineering shortage? by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

      I'm glad I didn't read this. My engineering career took off when I turned 40.

      --
      Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
    107. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The company I work for has engineers valued higher than managers in most ways - and as a result has plenty of senior engineers actively avoiding the move into management. The senior engineers are paid more than all but the top level managers.

      Pay levels are not openly discussed, but I remember warning my boss once about something the tax office were getting wrong that I expected to apply to him also. But he wasn't in the same tax bracket, which I realised meant I was paid substantially more than my boss (possibly more than double!)

    108. Re:Engineering shortage? by El+Torico · · Score: 1

      I've noticed a lot of technical professionals fall into the same "it's beneath me" trap that a lot of managers fall into. Being a competent business owner or manager does not preclude you from being a competent engineer. Can you focus on a particular discipline to the same degree? Probably not, but you're probably going to understand practical aspects of the discipline that a "mad scientist" wouldn't know since he wouldn't deign to learn them.
      A lot of people somehow think that business is inherently evil; it isn't. A business inherits its ethics and policies from the laws of the society it exists in and from the policies placed into it by its management. Again, too many technical people feel that they'll be morally compromised by moving into management or other less technically focused positions. Instead, they should realize that they have the opportunity to influence other people in the organization. Yes, it can be damned annoying and frustrating at times, but it doesn't demean you.
      You're right in that it is wise (and probably necessary) to take business classes, but you're wrong when you denigrate those who choose to get involved with the business aspects of the profession. Is there "pure" engineering ? Unless you happen to be incredibly well self-funded or part of a well endowed university, you ultimately have to align your work with the interests of the business, whether it's one you own or not.

      --
      In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is usually crucified.
    109. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      3) No girls in companies you will end up working at
      That's why God made Thailand.

    110. Re:Engineering shortage? by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      I left the field not by choice. I was laid off with many others during a downturn. I found myself in a crowded field as an engineer. I got many more interest as a programmer even though I only picked up some Java in order to do some lite programming related to engineering. I went the IT route and never went back to engineering.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    111. Re:Engineering shortage? by Sir_Eptishous · · Score: 1

      You know it's Slashdot when a topic about STEM careers devolves into an analysis on pussy.

      --
      We play the game with the bravery of being out of range
    112. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course they are not, as the articles and the various graphs provided on this and several linked articles indicate, they are not increasing precisely because of the H1-B visa program that permits the hiring of foreign nationals at reduced pay levels any time additional workers are needed. You are right, its all about getting engineers on the cheap, but that is precisely the problem the US faces. How can the US maintain our technological superiority if we do not employ the most talented of workers? The problem has broad implications since in time the differential between US and foreign universities in STEM will continue to decrease and then we will loose the primary driver for our lead, research universities. We are already seeing the migration of leadership in entire STEM disciplines move abroad most notably in particle physics and in the biomolecular sciences.

    113. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with deflation is that no one will invest money anymore.
      You only have to keep it in your pocket and its value will grow over time.
      No investments -> no increase of efficiency.

    114. Re:Engineering shortage? by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      Here is a hint, it isn't just teachers that can teach your kids something you can do it as well. My 3 year old son wants to learn about how everything works and you know what I can teach him a lot. The other day when I was fixing my car (needed new ignition coils) he was there helping me. The whole time he was asking what different things do, how they work, and why does my car need it. When ever something breaks he wants to watch me fix it and explain how it works. When we are out and about he is always asking questions about the how and why of things. The strangest question I ever got was "Daddy, how to bees work?" after we were watching some honey and bumble bees going about their business. It was a good question but not something I expected from a 2.5 year old which is why I thought it was so strange.

      Like most boys he likes big machines, especially tractors, earth movers, trains, and anything steam powered (damn you Thomas) so I have taken him to places to see those things where he can see them working and/or have someone explain how they work. I have taken him:
      Up to the iron range in northern Minnesota to see some giant earth movers in action as well as see the old equipment that is on display
      To Duluth harbor to see the big ore boats
      To the local dual fuel coal/gas power plant for a tour
      To the Nowthen Threshing show (old tractors, and old stationary engines)
      To the Colorado Railroad Museum

      That was all last just summer and he wants to go see it all again. Little kids are like sponges they just take it all in so instead of sitting around watching TV we go do stuff and he learns a lot about things he is interested in. He gets exposed to lots of other different things as well

      --
      Time to offend someone
    115. Re:Engineering shortage? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      An H1B puts you at the mercy of your employer. This leads to a more relevant specialist with a PhD getting paid less than someone with less education, less experience, and a less relevant speciality. The main difference being the ability to walk out on your current employer.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    116. Re:Engineering shortage? by tjb · · Score: 2

      Where in the bay area do they pay engineers $40k/yr? Where I work, we start our juniors at twice that and we aren't even considered a particularly well paying organization...

    117. Re:Engineering shortage? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      The other comment sums most of it up. But the rules say something to the effect that you must offer the job to qualified, native applicants FIRST, and you must offer the same pay to the H1-B as to the native applicant. If no skilled native applicant takes the job as offered, you may then request an H1B.

      So native applicants must jump through two hoops: one they must prove that they are qualified for the usually exaggerated requirements of the application (this interview put me through everything from database programming to analog hw design, which realistically not many people can do, but I can, because I love what I do), and then they offered me a salary well below what I'm worth. It is totally legal, since engineers have very wide salary bands, and simply offering the median for the band is generally well below what anyone with this level of experience is worth. So of course I said no, and since I'm employed by that company now, I can see the name of the person who filled my spot. Call it racism if you want, but with that name there's a very strong chance he's not from around here.

      You will have to accept on faith that employers, although they do want the most skilled applicant they can get, are more focused on the cheapest applicant they can get. If I were elected president, I'd abolish H1-B's entirely and start handing out green cards to these people instead. If they're good enough to fill job reqs, they're good enough to get the full blessing and burden of the US labor market.

      But really the only shortage in the US is of technicians, there are probably entirely too many engineers both in the US and worldwide. Every argument made in this article that applies to STEM student, applies tenfold to high school students who'd consider trade school. Technicians are treated like absolute shit, but SHOULD be the backbone of our corporations.

    118. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "They will always be rich."

      Historically, this is not what happens. The differences between rich and poor increase over time. When the differences are big enough, the majority of poor rebels and kills the minority of rich (which have paid armies on their side, so it is usually a bloodbath).

      Then the few people that remain says "we'll do it better this time!" and they start the cycle again.

      Well, not always. In fact, only on a couple of separate occasions. Historically the bloodbath happened only when rulers showed some degree of remorse and tried to come to terms with angry mob. If they don't try to be "humane" and instead rely on their henchmen strongarming the masses, then the henchmen substitute old ruling class as superfluous and a drain on resources. You see, at end of Roman Empire, it was actually that poor just started completely ignoring the authority of the rich, with impunity and new ruling class was from the ranks of paid armies leaders - you know, "the knights". However it is true that old system first fails to work, then new system emerges as new ruling class makes new arrangement with the masses (some sort of "social contract"), in order to restart society. The point is, masses have power, but their power has not been the potential for violence but potential for production. Nowadays, in the system built around optimizing efficiency of production, the power of the masses is mostly buying power.

    119. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell are you doing out of the kitchen?!? And take those damn shoes off!

    120. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      My mother used to be a nurse; one thing that shocked me about them is how many of them are (or were, this was in the 90s) smokers.

    121. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Yes, and the numbers there are vanishingly small. I agree about the HR bit too; I met a few single women in HR when I was dating (besides the women, married or not, that I met in HR at companies I worked at); there's no way I'd ever date a woman in HR. There's something wrong with them. That profession attracts some seriously wacky people.

    122. Re:Engineering shortage? by maple_shaft · · Score: 1

      The interesting question then becomes, "where did all the extra money go?"

      I wondered the same thing until I saw the Banana Republic like distributions of wealth and the wealth distribution trends.

      I will take the excellent point in your post and go one step farther. The incredible productivity increases in the last 100 years are such that abject poverty and starvation can likely be avoided for most people, and still be great enough that not everybody actually has to work. Keynes predicted that we would all be working two hours a day and maintain our lifestyles. We have never been busier and had to work harder in history just to maintain our lifestyles.

      We could all be living in collective paradise however for the insanely rich to maintain power and control over the world they need a constant and never ending pressure of inflation to constantly keep us working and dependent on them for our lifestyles which have in all reality never been cheaper to provide for in all of human history.

    123. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I never said being a businessman was bad or evil or beneath engineers, just different. Running a small business can be very rewarding as an engineer; you may not get as much time to do actual engineering, but you get to pick the projects you want to work on, you get to set the schedules and deadlines, you get to pick the customers you want to service (or fire), you get to pick the IT infrastructure you use (don't like Rational Clearcase because it's a POS and you want to use GIT instead? No problem!).

      Being different is a pretty big factor: running a business takes different skills than just being an engineer. Not all engineers have those skills, or care to develop them. There's a fair amount of "soft skills" there: dealing with customers, vendors, etc., which you usually don't do much of when you're a straight-up engineer. Some people are good at both, some aren't.

      Running a small business is also extremely risky. It usually requires some capital to start up (which may very well come from your personal savings), it requires you to leave your well-paying MegaCo day job to concentrate on it, even though it might not be bringing in any profit yet, etc. If you succeed, the financial (and other) rewards can be great; if you fail, you may lose much of your savings, plus the opportunity to have made good money as an employee in your regular job. Most businesses are not successes (though restaurants probably give businesses in general a bad rap on this point).

      But more importantly IMO, the CEOs and politicians screaming about the "shortage" of engineers aren't looking for kids to get engineering degrees and then strike out on their own with their own small business (or Facebook), they're looking for kids to put themselves $100k in debt with engineering degrees, then come to work for them in their big companies as peons for as little as they can get away with paying them.

    124. Re:Engineering shortage? by sugarmatic · · Score: 1

      You acknowledge the future economic unsustainability then...and that STEM careers require something more than rational economic choices by students who only have an inkling of their future plans under the best of circumstances.

      I don't advise any kid to go into STEM for any other reason than they are interested in it- because there are really no other compelling reasons despite all the blabbering marketeering going on to encourage people to do so.

      My engineering class had one (1) female. My first job had thirty (30) men (Fortune 50 nice big company office scene, consumer products/printers/computers/test/measurement/you know who, etc). It took 9 years in three companies before I actually worked with a female engineer of any discipline (ME, CS, EE...). All but a handful of past co-workers have given up and are either in management (far easier, higher pay), real estate (same), investment banking (need I say more).

    125. Re:Engineering shortage? by hackula · · Score: 1

      I graduated from university 2.5 years ago, and believe I know a thing or two about the job market for young professionals. I have friends in finance, business, law, etc. One by one, here is what I have seen: Finance - Typically when people talk about finance, they have in mind the Wall Street traders making 600,000 a year with a brownstone in NYC. This is a TINY fraction of the industry, reserved for the most elite in the field. These few are the outlier not the norm. The norm for finance is working for some small regional bank processing mutual fund paperwork pulling in 30 a year if you can find a job in the industry at all after school. Business - A business degree might as well be any degree in the humanities these days. A member of my family has been working as a career advisor for an MBA program for a well known school for the past 10 years. Their top MBA student last year couldn't find a well paying job for a couple months after graduating before he settled for a position that probably barely required an undergrad paying just shy of 40k. Law - I still have a lot of friends going into law school (mostly business and finance undergrads tired of waiting tables). At least in my area, the market for lawyers is 100% saturated. A lot of law graduates are stuck working as paralegals still. There is still money to be made in law if you specialize in something wacky, but good luck building up that expertise in the first place if you cannot get your foot in the door. Engineering (non-software) - Mechanical seems to be doing well, but I would hate to be in civil engineering with this construction market the way it is. My chemical/electrical/mechanical friends have been doing well, while my civil friends have had it pretty rough. Software Engineering - Me, and every software engineer friend I have, receive unsolicited job offers every week. I have been offered a position at every software company that I have heard of in my area (a medium sized city) without even trying. I make about twice what my best paid business friend makes, all with less stress, better benefits, and virtually no grunt work. I am no Silicon Valley superstar and none of my friends are Wall Street superstars; we are just regular people in different industries in an average US city, which is what we really should be talking about here. Who cares if the CEO of BofA makes x million dollars in his sleep? That is not at all representative of your average "business person", and is akin to claiming that software engineers are all fat cats since the founders of Google have enough money to buy the moon. Sure, software engineering has pay caps, but c'mon, they are still in the 6 figures in most markets. Also, if you build something yourself and start a company off of it, salary caps disappear.

    126. Re:Engineering shortage? by El+Torico · · Score: 1

      I completely understand your comments about small business, I was a Class B Carpentry contractor until I realized that the number of hours I was working weren't worth the return. I learned a lot about business through "the school of hard knocks" during that time.
      I agree, CEOs whine and cry about government regulations, but then want their problems solved through legislation rather than the "free hand of the market". As for politicians, it's funny how the US accepts a higher cost per inmate than college student. Legalize marijuana and spend the proceeds and savings on college educations and the STEM shortage problem goes away very quickly.

      --
      In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is usually crucified.
    127. Re:Engineering shortage? by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      This isn't true. It depends on the company of course, but in my experience, at the large companies (like Intel), there's tons of women.

      - an interesting choice for a measurement unit: 'tons of women'.

      In many cases 'tons of women' is really only a few heads.

    128. Re:Engineering shortage? by Teancum · · Score: 1

      While you may not need a commodity as a currency which is derived from elemental metals, grain, cattle, or giant rocks, it does need to be something that is restricted from production or difficult to acquire. A fiat currency can fill that role, which is one reason I think something like Bitcoin is a possible alternative currency (its production is mathematically restricted.

      In that sense, I sort of agree with you about the Federal Reserve in terms of how the Board of Governors can arbitrarily create U.S. Dollars out of nothingness in unlimited quantities and "loan" that money to whomever they choose at whatever rate of return they desire (at the moment zero percent interest to all major banks). I also find it interesting how the Federal Reserve is loaning money to banks at zero percent interest only to let those same banks buy up federal treasury securities at a higher rate of interest with that money and those banks can pocket the difference.

      Because of that, auditing the Fed isn't really going to accomplish much as they can continue to load literally trillions of dollars to their buddies to make essentially whatever amount of "profit" they want to give to those friends. I wouldn't mind getting a similar kind of gig, borrowing a trillion dollars and earning 4%-10% on that money and pocketing the difference. Yes, some of that money does end up getting loaned to foreign banks, individuals, and even governments for the purchase of things like federal treasuries as well. Isn't that grande?

      All in all, with the technology improvements we've had in the last hundred years, our currency should have deflated tremendously, maybe even 100 or 1000 times. The interesting question then becomes, "where did all the extra money go?"

      Much of that extra "money" went into the wealth that is or at least was America. It is in the homes, factories, farms, highways, stores, and much else that is this country. That is where that "extra money" went. Some portion of it admittedly went into the pockets of con artists and there were also some people due to circumstances and ingenuity were also able to legitimately earn some of that money, but for the most part it went into the pockets of ordinary Americans.

    129. Re:Engineering shortage? by lgw · · Score: 1

      The ones that went to U of Pheonix or other trade schools are just not suitable as systems coders (jobs we pay very well for). I don't know if it's universities failing to educate, or standards going up.

      AFAIK, there are only a handful of universities in the US with sytems programming programs. I think that's always been true, but now the gap is just to big to cross. If you hire someone from a "Java school" (who didn't supplement his education on his own), you're completely starting form scratch for systems programing.

      What will make you OODLES of money in engineering is being a master of certain much needed, but not well peopled, technique

      My career has been mosty build on what they now call "the ilities" in th Agile world - the unglamorous work needed to make a product mature. I guess it helps to have a systems background for that, but it's not a niche because it's hard to learn, it's a niche because it's so not sexy. Which is fine by me, TBH.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    130. Re:Engineering shortage? by snotclot · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to hit on you, get a reality check. I only want to be friends and meet all your other friends (male AND female). I mentioned networking, NOT hitting on all your immediate girl contacts and making them leaf nodes.

    131. Re:Engineering shortage? by milkasing · · Score: 1

      "There shouldn't be more units of money in existence now than there was 100 years ago. " There are lots of reasons why money supply should increase. For instance here is one of Krugman's examples from an article a long time ago (well long before he was associated with the left) Babysitting the Economy

    132. Re:Engineering shortage? by milkasing · · Score: 1

      "There shouldn't be more units of money in existence now than there was 100 years ago. " There are lots of reasons why money supply should increase. For instance here is one of Krugman's examples from an article a while back (long before he was associated so strongly with the left) Babysitting The Economy

    133. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OP here. Thanks for sharing your experiences. A few others have remarked similarly, as well. I believe you guys are right; I did indeed have the fat cats in mind and the top-earners in mind.

      I have met patent laywers making anywhere from $300-$600 per hour. I doubt they get remotely close to 40 hours per week, but that is insane and they easily eclipse most high-earning engineers. Also I came from a view of masters / phd, having done one myself. :)

    134. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Not where I worked; at Intel, there were 10k people just in my one campus, and there were lots of women. There were many female engineers, but most were non-American (and married), but most women were doing other jobs more typically associated with females: finance and HR. They also worked in an adjoining building, and didn't hang out with the engineers much (for good reason, those jobs usually don't have to interface with engineering much). Any company with 100k employees is naturally going to have a lot of finance, HR, marketing, and legal people, and those positions are frequently filled by women these days; being a tech company doesn't change that.

    135. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh a 4-digit has emerged :D

      >"Also, there are usually plenty of girls in classes / clubs like ballroom dancing who dig science / engineering types (particularly the foreign girls)... because face it, you don't really want to be talking to your gf about problem sets all the time."

      This is the only way current engineers can do it, out of classes and not going through friends (existing channels). My argument is that, naturally going through 4 years of classes, in other majors you develop strongly connected networks *without* having to expend inordinate amounts of time doing (dubious) clubs. Engineers are just faced with.. that much more.. difficulties and disadvantages.

      > "Given how much trouble people get into for shitting where they eat, this is probably a plus."

      That is a good point. My original intent was to emphasize networking; i.e., once you're out in the real world, it is hard to meet people. Meeting girls through existing girls (on your team, group, division) is alot more helpful than going through "cold-calling" things such as Meetup's, bars, etc.

      > "And some people's life goal is to be able to go shopping on someone else's credit card."

      Hahaha.. I suppose we engineers are expected to clam up and dish out.

      Also your point about meeting a gf/wife in education: I'm not sure that works. I am trying to have a balanced set of friends to increase the probability of meeting the right girl to marry. Once I do get hitched, meeting women is not really a primary concern, unless i'm a superstart athelete (jk).

    136. Re:Engineering shortage? by trout007 · · Score: 1

      What you don't understand is there is a natural interest rate that is the price given to time preference. Just like when you go to the super market and decide that you could rather have a pound of apples vs the $2 the store charges there is a rate given to how much you prefer present good to future goods.

      Deflation in a free market hard currency system would be minimized because as the price of goods drops people tend to buy more. Also as the commodities that would be most likely used for money become more valuable more people would spend their time and energy producing money which would cause inflation. But unlike a fiat currency inflation it requires actual work and the money is first put into use by those that put the work in creating the money.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    137. Re:Engineering shortage? by BetterSense · · Score: 1

      Your last point hits home. I went to college for physics and grad school for materials engineering, and I work for a fortune 500 company. People I went to highschool with didn't even go to college and make nearly what I make (possibly more due to lower cost of living) working in coal mines making $25 per hour with benefits and overtime, and work less hours than I do.

    138. Re:Engineering shortage? by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Jesus, dude, then you are not talking about tons, then you are talking about megatons.

      Get with the program.

    139. Re:Engineering shortage? by flyneye · · Score: 1

      Same here, TV is the least used appliance in the house.
      When my girl can close her schoolbooks, she hangs with the ol' man out in the shop and is developing a love of woodwork and electronics.
      Seen the monster ships in Duluth.
      We did Colorado Springs area recently too.
      Yeah, parents are the best teachers. Too many have no time. Two parent households that work, add overtime and the kids raise themselves in front of the T.V. and now the internet. There is something wrong, when they say we have it better now, more resources and a finer standard of living than ever. Lies, just gov't approved lies.
      We are just slaves generating tax income for a power hungry corrupt government. Our national output replaced the gold standard, essentially we are slaves propping up those bold and corrupt enough to join the Repubmocrat party.
              I reccomend hacking a way of life that puts child rearing back near the top of the priority list even if it puts you outside government approval. It is just a basic human right to seek survival for yourself and posterity. Governments come and go and they all suck soon after reaching office, we must adapt to survive. Filling in the 80% hole left by gov't approved education is manditory for your genetic future. I take it seriously enough , I put mine in private school in spite of my humble income, and you better believe there are still things to learn over and above what is taught now. Her private education is only slightly better than the public education I got decades ago.
              Teaching them to learn and fullfill their curiosity is the best thing you can do. Sounds like you got it handled. Gives me hope, others feel the same.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    140. Re:Engineering shortage? by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      Lots of people don't make time for their kids. I have lots of things I would like to work on but until my kids get older and can safely be around things like an arc welder in operation I can't do those activities. As far as schools we have started investigating (my wife is a teacher) and we decided that even though we live in the best school district in the state that our kids aren't going to be going to the local public elementary school as there has been a large increase in problems (drugs, violence, etc.) at that school. Instead they will probably be going to the charter school my wife works at where the students regularly end up a year or 2 ahead of their peers when the go to one of the public high schools. Granted my kids will miss out on shop and home ec classes in middle school but my kids are already getting exposed to those subjects in a more in depth fashion than the school would go into anyway. This summer my oldest (the 3 year old) wants to do model rockets because he thinks rockets are neat so I will be getting some inexpensive basic stuff to start out with so that I don't end up wasting money on things he may loose interest in and at least expose him to it.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    141. Re:Engineering shortage? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      "tax office"? Are you located outside the USA? If so, this whole discussion probably doesn't really apply to you. While other countries are copying our crony capitalism to lesser extents, none of them are nearly as bad as here.

    142. Re:Engineering shortage? by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

      That only made it all the worse for me. As an engineering major, I had no reference points to judge what a minimum passing level of effort WAS in an upper division history course. So I had to read until my eyes bled for fear that I wasn't reading enough, or understanding enough or remembering enough.

      I think I ended up pulling a high C, and everybody always knew more than me whenever they spoke up in class. It was humbling. I think something like that experience should be required for engineers, because I meet a lot of them who have obviously never had an experience where they didn't think they were the smartest guy in the room.

    143. Re:Engineering shortage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As opposed to a deep woman? Are you sayin' .... never mind.

  2. Of course nobody is interested in STEM. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 3, Funny

    SEED is similarly not of interest to the average college student.

    Once we start programs promoting BUD, then we'll see some results.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
    1. Re:Of course nobody is interested in STEM. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's BUD? Besides weed?

    2. Re:Of course nobody is interested in STEM. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SEED is certainly better than STEM

    3. Re:Of course nobody is interested in STEM. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2

      "Besides"?

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
  3. uhmm most STEM jobs are govt jobs by decora · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    either they are direct govt employees, or they are employed by companies that exist maily because of government contracts.

    1. Re:uhmm most STEM jobs are govt jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's irrelevant to his point.

  4. Re:Real Reason by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 2

    In short, you say people suck, governments suck and corporations suck. Where do you go from there?

  5. Oh stop it already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    There's no shortage of employees. There's an oversupply of cheap credit and a shift from compaines doing their research in-house like they used to do around WWII to 1970s-ish, to now where the government subsidizes education so universities can become free R&D for companies.

    University has gone from something only a few people should do to something like a cult. You have to go because everyone else has.

    1. Re:Oh stop it already by lwriemen · · Score: 1

      You do realize that the "research in-house like they used to do around WWII to 1970s-ish" was mostly government subsidized.

  6. Looking back... by Anubis+IV · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Don't the booms in STEM careers seem to come around times when the regular person finds more interest in them? Make them interesting again and people will flock to them. Glorify worthless endeavors and people will flock to those. How many children chose to go into engineering fields because of the space race? I'm betting a lot. How many today are instead following in the footsteps of modern celebrities and other people and groups that the media puts on a pedestal?

    Maybe STEM just needs to be cool to Regular Joe again.

    </mini soap box>

    1. Re:Looking back... by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      Damn straight. We need horn-rimmed glasses and pocket protectors to be in style again.

    2. Re:Looking back... by darenw · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I've always been fascinated by that time in the mid-20th Century known as the Space Age. The public was excited about "atomic power" as it was known then, breaking the sound barrier, the moon race, and all that. That, and certain strands of modern art combined to make architectural elements echoing the themes of space and atomic/nuclear physics - orbits, star shapes, etc. These memes escaped their birthnests and could be found all over - restaurants, gas stations, signage, furniture, etc. Regular Joes and their families bought "transistor radios" - cool stuff back then! Color TV became real for most people in the 1960s or 1970s. Computers and anything NASA did were the ultimate in coolness. There was a lot to be excited about. (And of course, plenty of stuff best left ignored, as in any era.)

      Now that I think about it, seems like many areas of engineering and science made contributions that lead to product ideas that lead to stuff everyone could get in their hands or see while driving about town.

      Yeah, STEM needs to be cool and resume giving things to the people.

      What new gadgets, or imagined gadgets, does everyone yearn for? Tablets and smartphones, okay, those are cool. These are wonderful for practical reasons, but somehow not as amazing as small radios were fifty years ago, only the logical next step in miniaturizing known technology. We have amazing TVs/monitors now, too. What are the big itches to explore we can all rally together under? Orbit the Earth? Been there done that. What next? Deep sea exploration impresses some people, but hasn't influenced the arts or architecture or much of anything else.

      Any /. subscriber knows there's no shortage of awesome science and new technology today. But much of it is so remote from practicality, very abstract. Our most important ideas don't translate as easily into physical expression. What can a architect or industrial designer do with the idea of Higgs bosons? Have we made a decent effort with that? How 'bout nanotechnology memes incorporated into architectural decorations? Sadly, architecture has been lacking in any decorative drive the last couple decades (see Against the Architects of Empire, essay by theorist Nikos Salingaros) That needs to change.

      Everyone, your missions are to think up things that are amazing and that can, in principle, lead to something practical that Regular Joe can hold in hand or see while driving about on errands or weekend trips. Do the science, or invent something from the science, or find ways to express the key ideas in some artsy way within reach of the general population. Stuff on the internet doesn't count. Actual physical reality needs to carry the banner of Current Hot Science Ideas.

    3. Re:Looking back... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Put engineers and scientists in charge of cool things on tv shows and movies. Not the evil scientist or nerdly sidekick.
      glamor of prime time lawyer shows. There is as much drama in getting products designed and manufactured as talking heads on a bench/witness stand.

  7. The program was engineered poorly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So it's clear, they did not find top quality scientist and engineers to design the initiatives to boost interest.....let me guess, a bunch of damn lawyers designed them?

  8. STEM's Weakness in today's economy by siphonophore · · Score: 5, Informative

    The problem with STEM jobs is that they involve actually doing things rather than directing them to be done: the lowest rung on the ladder. Nevermind that the skills required to perform these tasks are far more specialized and difficult to attain than those required by their managers. US students may have sensed that STEM careers are for suckers and are best outsourced; you need only compare the financial state of two equally intelligent 50-year-olds--a scientist and a businessman--to see why.

    Most STEM careers are not worth the effort in the US. The ones that are combine technical skills with entrepreneurship or pure luck.

    --
    Dance like you're hurt, Love like you need money, and work when somebody's watching.
    -Scott Adams
    1. Re:STEM's Weakness in today's economy by frisket · · Score: 2

      The problem with STEM jobs is that they involve actually doing things rather than directing them to be done: the lowest rung on the ladder. Nevermind that the skills required to perform these tasks are far more specialized and difficult to attain than those required by their managers.

      Most management is actually an overhead, because they don't do anything productive. Some actually hinder the company from functioning properly. A few actually do the job productively, but not many, IMHO. If that was expressed in the company accounts, things would look very different.

    2. Re:STEM's Weakness in today's economy by siphonophore · · Score: 2

      Those company accounts definitely work against us. In the "make a product for 1 dollar and sell it for 5" business model, we're paid out of the $1 and "they" out of the $4.

      --
      Dance like you're hurt, Love like you need money, and work when somebody's watching.
      -Scott Adams
    3. Re:STEM's Weakness in today's economy by EzInKy · · Score: 1

      It's a free market thing. A lot of the responses in this discussion have it exactly backwards. Businesses don't care how much effort it takes to get a STEM degree, all they care about is what profits STEM graduates can earn for them.

      --
      Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
    4. Re:STEM's Weakness in today's economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Medical Doctors typically make more than their managers. Especially specialists. There is no reason certain fields can't be in the same boat. In fact, I am finding that the good software developers are moving into that category (if they aren't there already). It is so freakin' hard to find a good developer (which is 10x-20x more efficient than an average developer) and companies are currently trying to pick them up.

      I have 1st hand experience in this.

    5. Re:STEM's Weakness in today's economy by siphonophore · · Score: 1

      Please go tell this to all your manager friends and then punch them in the face for not believing you.

      --
      Dance like you're hurt, Love like you need money, and work when somebody's watching.
      -Scott Adams
    6. Re:STEM's Weakness in today's economy by siphonophore · · Score: 1

      Yes. STEM jobs resemble those that can be commodit-ized to the untrained eye.

      Actually, that may be true for some of them.

      --
      Dance like you're hurt, Love like you need money, and work when somebody's watching.
      -Scott Adams
    7. Re:STEM's Weakness in today's economy by notanalien_justgreen · · Score: 1

      Yeah, this always frustrates me. A company makes a nice product and an executive gets credit for making the company billions when everyone runs out to buy said product. The business man is doing a decent job, but the product (and its creator) are the real money makers here. However the compensation is completely backwards from this.

      We need to stop rewarding people from pushing paper and digital money around. Looking back, I'm glad I did a STEMy career, but it sure wasn't the best choice with regards to my financial state.

  9. Unless your one of the few by Osgeld · · Score: 2, Insightful

    who are truly passionate about it, whats your incentive? average pay? 40 18+ hour days with no days off? spending weeks at a time away from home and family while being anally examined by a customer?

    who doesn't want a part of that?

    1. Re:Unless your one of the few by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't see how exaggerating helps any. Does anyone really work 40 18+ hour days with no days off? Even when I was in the more commercial world I never did that and I've never known any other engineers that did. I always took lots of time off and still do - I'll be taking 4 weeks off this summer (the kid's still in school so we've got to take all vacation in the summer). And average pay? I'm paid better then a lot of the business majors. (Unless they're in management, but who the hell wants to do that for a living? But I still make more than some in management, so maybe that doesn't even help.) I could probably shoot for management, but I don't see any reason to make myself hate my job. I've never spent weeks away from home and family. I probably miss out on some promotions because of that, but I'm ok with that.

      There's another advantage to engineering. I know some business types that were laid off and they've really struggled to find a new job. I, too, was laid off, but I always had lots of interviews to go to and I ended up with a better job that paid more than the old job. Even in the worst part of the recession, I had people calling me about possible jobs. It's always seemed to me that I've had more job security than other fields (except medical - I should have become that kind of doctor!).

    2. Re:Unless your one of the few by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      I work for a small company, one of our 6 EE's has worked 36 days with no days off, comes in at 8 leaves at 9 works at home. spent the last 3 weeks in Detroit getting probed by our customer.

    3. Re:Unless your one of the few by thejaq · · Score: 1

      You probably haven't fully disclosed the circumstances of the situation. You make it sound like hes a low-level engineer with no choice in the matter. He's salaried at normal pay for working double time? Alas, those 37 extra hours divided by 6 EEs is pretty reasonable for a 1 month stretch. Do you remaining 5 just hate this guy? Is he in a senior position with something especially important to gain from this? Furthermore, by your own description he is atypical, as in ~17% of your engineers... That said, if it as you make it seem, he is part problem. If I have to compete with idiots who will accept such ridiculously poor working conditions, I'd rather apply my PhD serving espresso, thankfully I'm a miser and that will always be an option :-)

  10. Re:Real Reason by visualight · · Score: 1

    Nope. There isn't anyone that won't try to have a rewarding career "because the government make sure they get a certain quality of life." If someone isn't trying to be successful in life "the government will take care of me" is certainly *never* the reason. Even the think tanks that spread this bullshit propaganda know it isn't true. No matter how many times it's repeated it still won't be true.

    --
    Samsung took back my unlocked bootloader because Google wants me to rent movies. They're both evil.
  11. all nationalism is utterly stupid by decora · · Score: 4, Insightful

    every article written about 'the decline of american labor x' needs to wake up and realize that 'american labor x' ceased to have meaning when corporations became globalized. NYSE is not the New York Stock Exchange. it is NYSE-Euronext, with its tentacles in pies all over the world. They can have their headquarters anywhere. Companies like IBM are not 'American Companies'. They are companies that happen to have a lot of managers in the United States, but they really don't need to.

    There is only one 'STEM labor supply', and it covers the face of the Earth, and that is where corporations and governments get their labor from. We are all in the same boat. The only way to 'save American labor X' is to save global labor x, and that means fighting against corrupt, repressive governments like China, where STEM people are thrown in prison if they criticize the system.

    1. Re:all nationalism is utterly stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) arrest all the top executives and put them in death camps
      2) we have the biggest military in the world. lets use it and go after these fuckers internationally.

    2. Re:all nationalism is utterly stupid by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

      The NYSE is still the NYSE because the EU nixed the merger.

    3. Re:all nationalism is utterly stupid by Guppy06 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Focusing on hiring Americans is as close to organized labor as we're going to get in my lifetime.

    4. Re:all nationalism is utterly stupid by couchslug · · Score: 1

      The problem isn't "collective bargaining in the US", it's lack of collective bargaining elsewhere.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    5. Re:all nationalism is utterly stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey Rambo, here's your M4, now go arrest Hu Jintao and Terry Gou. Better yet, just STFU.

    6. Re:all nationalism is utterly stupid by YoopDaDum · · Score: 2

      Not exactly. NYSE is today NYSE-Euronext, this merger has been closed in 2007. Euronext itself was the merger of the Amsterdam, Brussel and Paris stock exchanges by the way.

      What has recently been canned is the acquisition of NYSE-Euronext by Deutsche Borse. In certain markets in the EU the resulting group would have had a too dominant position, so the EU competition authorities didn't authorize the deal.

    7. Re:all nationalism is utterly stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nationalism is stupid but it is the only form of representative government we've got. Until you and I can vote for our global representative and have our concerns heard, nationalism is still useful.

  12. Supply and demand by jpobst · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's simple supply and demand.

    Anyone who is smart enough to do STEM is also smart enough to get an MBA for a lot less work, and have 10x the earnings potential.

    When CEO's making tens of millions say they can't find engineers, they really mean they can't find engineers for what they want to pay them. If you start paying engineers like executives, management, or sales, you'll have plenty of people stepping up.

    1. Re:Supply and demand by MetricT · · Score: 1

      I meant to say...

      When you say something is *important*, and yet treat it as unimportant, people are smart enough to see through that.

    2. Re:Supply and demand by nomadic · · Score: 2

      MBAs are a losing proposition except from the most elite schools. Executives/management get money only if they work their way up, and sales tends to pay lousy unless you are actually bringing in a lot of business.

    3. Re:Supply and demand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After the Engineering MS I did the MBA. It was like "where's the beef?"

    4. Re:Supply and demand by MBC1977 · · Score: 1

      Your absolutely right. However, while some people go in to business to make the world a better place; the majority go into business to make profits. And provided you are able to get your business off the ground, you probably want the best employees for the cheapest amount of salary you can pay them so you can maximize the amount of profit you can keep (i.e. pay yourself).

      I'm not saying this is good or bad, its just an observation that generally has panned out over the years.

      --
      Regards,

      MBC1977,
    5. Re:Supply and demand by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 2

      The MBA's, pols, and lobbyists that run our society can't seem to understand that supply and demand applies to other people as well.

      What makes you think they don't get it? They have all the incentive in the world to create a glut of engineers on the labor market, and who are personally on the hook for the costs of their training. (And there's even something for the bankers: student loans can't be discharged through bankruptcy in the U.S.)

    6. Re:Supply and demand by magamiako1 · · Score: 1

      Cut out everything you said....replace "Government" with "Corporatist profiting gluttons"

      Problem fixed.

    7. Re:Supply and demand by roeguard · · Score: 2

      I can't find someone who'll sell me a Corvette for $10. That must mean there's a Corvette shortage...

      The MBA's, pols, and lobbyists that run our society can't seem to understand that supply and demand applies to other people as well. If the reward for several years of grad school were equal to the risk and cost, you'd see more people in STEM. That's why they went into finance, because that's where the money was.

      When the scientists and engineers make more money than the MBA's running the company, I'll imaging you won't have any problem finding them. (And I have both a MBA from a top 25 school and 12 years in high-performance computer. Guess who makes more around here...)

      When you say something is unimportant, and yet treat it as unimportant, people are smart enough to see through that.

      From my experience, which I admit is anecdotal at best, Engineering pays just as well as Business.

      Comparing an undergrad engineering degree to an MBA is not a fair comparison: half of those MBAs also have an engineering undergrad (at least the males do anyway). Of course they make more money than someone with just a bachelors. They also have learned *why* things need to be "engineered", not just *how*.

      If you start looking at post-docs in engineering, then you can start comparing to MBAs. That's a closer fit. Yes, post-docs have been in school longer, but any decent MBA program requires 3+ years work experience to get admitted to the program. In the end, its about the same amount of work.

      MBAs will go on to run most of a company's executive staff, and if they are worth their salt and have the ambition, will eventually make CEO. Likewise, a post-doc with smarts and ambition will be tech founders, and start the next Google, and retire in style after making their name.

      There is plenty of room for growth in engineering, and the sky is the limit if you are willing to (1) get educated, and (2) take some risks. This is no different than any other field.

    8. Re:Supply and demand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      1. Huge strawman. Not only are these 'progressive forces' a very ambiguous group, but you claim to know what drives them and what they believe. This is worsened by the fact that you also claim that they've successfully managed to destroy American manufacturing in some sort of conspiracy. A conspiracy in which the movers and shakers have been largely bipartisan and probably too incompetent to actually pull off such a scheme.

      2. This idea that our political opponents are boogymen out to destroy the world is one of the main reasons our political system is so ineffective. The system doesn't work without compromise and compromise is no longer in vogue. The ineffective political system does a poor job of educating the populace, dealing with economic issues, and maintaining the peace. This causes not only less STEM jobs, but less STEM students. And less educated people in general. And more prisoners than anywhere else. I blame people like you, who contribute to the political vitriole that has deadlocked our system for decades while other first world nations advance ahead of us in every meaningful metric. Maybe if you took your self-righteous head out of your ass you would see that there is some merit in most theories of distributive justice and there is probably no intrinsically correct way for a government to deal with economic issues, there are only effective and ineffective ways, and these are contingent upon circumstance.

    9. Re:Supply and demand by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      there's a Corvette shortage...

      Oh, truer words were never spoken.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    10. Re:Supply and demand by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      there is some merit in most theories of distributive justice

      No, there is not. Never has been, and never will be. At least, as far as those that must suffer under such ideologies are concerned.

      The Utopian schemes of re-distribution of the wealth...are as visionary and impractical as those which vest all property in the Crown. - Samuel Adams

      I think the best way of doing good to the poor, is not making them easy in poverty, but leading or driving them out of it. - Benjamin Franklin

      The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not. - Thomas Jefferson

      You'll excuse me if I take their opinions over yours. Opinions such as yours have resulted in things like the USSR and Mao's China, among just a few similar horrors of history, whereas theirs led to the freest, most advanced & powerful nation on the planet, and provided the highest standard of living for it's people ever dreamed possible, and even put the first human on the moon.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    11. Re:Supply and demand by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      Opinions such as yours have resulted in things like the USSR and Mao's China, for just two examples among many similar horrors of history...

      Oops.

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    12. Re:Supply and demand by thejaq · · Score: 1

      Holy shit. Glen Beck is on /.

    13. Re:Supply and demand by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      Holy shit. Glen Beck is on /.

      There are two "n"'s in Glenn. :)

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    14. Re:Supply and demand by thejaq · · Score: 1

      Pardonn my ignorance.

  13. Shortage of students? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have a 4 year physics degree, with 3 years experience working in a III-V semiconductor research lab, and I've been trying to find a job in science and engineering for the past 3 months. The problem here is that there is a shortage of entry-mid level jobs. Everyone is looking for 5-10 years experience.

    1. Re:Shortage of students? by c_jonescc · · Score: 2

      I have a physics PhD with two postdocs (5 years total) at prestigious universities and am trying to find the right industry job, and it seems to me that a lot of companies are only hiring 22 year olds that they can pay less than $35k/year to.

      That's only half true to be honest. I have geographic limitations, and if those vanished there are plenty of interesting jobs. Are you sure there aren't for you also?

      --
      Getting diabetes AND salmonella would be a bad weekend.
    2. Re:Shortage of students? by Grishnakh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Out of curiosity, what are your geographic limitations? For a lot of careers, you have to go where the jobs are, to a certain extent. Certain industries tend to congregate in certain geographic areas (not necessarily just one, many times there'll be several). So, for instance, if you want to be a petroleum engineer, there's certain places where there's a lot of those jobs available: Texas, Louisiana, Alaska, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, etc. So if you're dead-set on living in Maine because your family is there, you're simply not going to find a job, and you were stupid to choose that major. (I'm assuming there's no oil in Maine.)

      Similarly, many engineering professions only have a good supply of jobs in major metro areas. So if you're dead-set on living in Bumpkinville, Wyoming, because all your family is there, again, you're stupid to choose that major or to even go into college for a professional degree. You should have just skipped college and gone to work at the local feed-n-seed store or Piggly Wiggly.

      If you're dead-set on living in one specific place, you need to choose your profession around this limitation, and the industries available there. If that means working at the feed-n-seed because that's the only thing in that small town better than McDonald's, then you need to pursue that. But if you're really interested in working in a certain industry, you need to go where that industry is located, and give up on geographic limitations. Of course, there's middle ground; if the industry is only located in one place, then you either need to go there or find a different profession/major. But if the industry has many locations (like how electronics and software are big in Silicon Valley, RTP, Austin, Seattle, plus a bunch of other large metro areas), then even if you hate one of those places, you still have others to choose from and can afford to limit yourself to a certain extent.

    3. Re:Shortage of students? by reason · · Score: 1

      Giving up geographic limitations, for many people, means giving up their family.

      Even a childless specialist-professional couple with no elder care responsibilities will have geographic limitations. If I can work in my field in Hobart or Hawaii or Massachusetts; while my husband can work in his field in Hobart or Washington or London (but not Hawaii or Massachusetts), that pretty much means we'll both stay in Hobart, stay in our current jobs, and pass up career opportunities that would require either of us to move.

    4. Re:Shortage of students? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if you're dead-set on living in Bumpkinville, Wyoming, . . . work at the local feed-n-seed store or Piggly Wiggly.

      There's no Piggly Wiggly in Wyoming, that's a southeast US chain. And if you live in Bumpkinville, you have to drive to Jackson Hole to find a grocery store.

    5. Re:Shortage of students? by El+Torico · · Score: 1

      My wife is in the US and I'm in Bahrain. This isn't the first time that we've been apart. Not having children is a big plus.

      --
      In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is usually crucified.
  14. change can only come from the top by Phantom+Gremlin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The decline of engineering as a career in this country is primarily because of two groups: a) top management and b) government policies. MBAs control top management, lawyers control government. Nothing will change until and unless those two groups understand that things need to change.

    I'm not optimistic.

    1. Re:change can only come from the top by nomadic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The decline of engineering is primarily because of a structural problem; you need a finite number of them, and after a certain point more don't really do much (not criticizing engineering at all, that's how EVERY field works).

    2. Re:change can only come from the top by MattW · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I have to respectfully disagree. People hire people because of market opportunities. Market opportunities exist because you can make a profit. The more capable engineers are of building more useful things in less time, the more demand there will be for your services.

      I am seeing market opportunities for something new/better all the time; things I could even build on my own if I wasn't entirely too busy with work. Moreover, most times I've needed to hire someone in a situation where I was the hiring manager or if I was an engineer on a team in need, I can say that it has always been hard to find qualified people. I can only think of one time, ever, where there was a position and we passed on someone because of salary. (And I probably could have swung it to a hire, and I later regretted passing. I'd read too many articles like this and was convinced someone equally/nearly equally qualified would come along. Nope. Open position for 6+ months.)

    3. Re:change can only come from the top by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      after a certain point more don't really do much (not criticizing engineering at all, that's how EVERY field works).

      Except for the law. The more lawyers they make the more lawyers we end up needing to fight the lawyers they keep making. Its kinda like the Borg...

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    4. Re:change can only come from the top by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Unemployment rate among newly graduated lawyers (in the sense of actual jobs needing a law degree) is probably about 50% right now.

    5. Re:change can only come from the top by YoopDaDum · · Score: 1

      There will likely be some time until something like IBM Watson can be applied to law in a large scale, but when this day happen it will be a bad days for junior positions in the area. And it'll happen.

  15. Because there is no money in STEM... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Simple answer. Almost all "hard science" is completely outsourced to other countries who can do code for pennies on the dollar compared to US hired. Need something done domestically? H-1Bs are easy to get with "secret requirements".

    For people heading to college, there is really only one lucrative major if one doesn't want to be in a tent at some Occupy convention with some sign asking where one's job is, waiting for the next Pike to give them a faceful of pepper spray. That would be law. If you can do programming or IT, you can sit through the classes, get your JD, pass the bar, and have yourself an actual profession, not a job. Law isn't going to be outsourced anytime soon.

    There are two ways to make money in the world: Make a bigger pie, or take a piece from someone else. The pie isn't getting any bigger in the US with zero technology advances, the fact that China kills any US industry that seems promising (solar? Hack the US companies, slurp up the trade secrets, then dump the panels for cheaper than they can be made. A PRC victory achieved), and the fact that the US politicians are more interested in "terrorists" and political infighting than actually doing anything to advance the countrey. So, might as well take your pie from others and make a living somehow, because we are in a phase of history of "everything has been invented", and this isn't going to change much for the next 20-30 years.

    I know this isn't something /. people want to hear, but you have to go where the money is, and both government and industry have their back turned any US-based engineering. So, you have to change and go with what makes the cash, and that's law.

    1. Re:Because there is no money in STEM... by tsotha · · Score: 1

      Law is a terrible profession to go into right now. Only graduates from the top 15 or so schools are getting jobs that require a legal education.

    2. Re:Because there is no money in STEM... by MattW · · Score: 1

      How about they advertise their services for less than $275/hour and work for themselves?

      There may not be many $250-450k salaried jobs available to new grads, but I'm extremely skeptical there's no work to be had.

    3. Re:Because there is no money in STEM... by tempest69 · · Score: 2

      There are two ways to make money in the world: Make a bigger pie, or take a piece from someone else. The pie isn't getting any bigger in the US with zero technology advances, the fact that China kills any US industry that seems promising (solar? Hack the US companies, slurp up the trade secrets, then dump the panels for cheaper than they can be made. A PRC victory achieved), and the fact that the US politicians are more interested in "terrorists" and political infighting than actually doing anything to advance the countrey

      Actually the pie is getting bigger, the Dow is higher than it's even been, and the average income is pretty good. But the problem is that the median is getting worse and worse. The rich are getting richer, the world is getting better, and yes the PRC is kicking our tail because they have build a proper manufacturing economy and we have blown our domestic manufacturing supply chains to smithereens.

      We are far from an "everything has been invented" stage.. Have you been looking at medicine and biology.. or the video of Bret Victor doing real time coding.. or the self driving cars from Google. or the Natural Gas Industry that's changing our power dependencies.. or the gigawatts of wind power that have become viable.. crazy data mining.. cell phones.. led lighting, oled screens, xray backscatter technology, terahertz technology, aerogels, graphene, nanotubes, diamond vapor deposition, flourinert, DeconGel, superhydrophobic surfaces, biomimetic gecko tape, rapid DNA sequencing, full dna replacement of a bacteria, transgenic everything (hypoallergenic cat anyone). multitouch surfaces. the cloud. 50 computer cores per chip-- knights corner. Stuxnet virus..

      ...... I completely reject the premise that were are remotely close to an "everything has been invented" phase of history

      Law is pretty overpopulated, too much lawyer drama on TV, same with forensic analysis.

    4. Re:Because there is no money in STEM... by tsotha · · Score: 1

      The world is full of high school and college athletes that want to play professional sports, so why do teams pay millions of dollars to some people and nothing to others?

      It's not enough to have a competent lawyer. You want a lawyer that's better than the other guy's lawyer, and it usually makes sense to hire the best you can afford.

    5. Re:Because there is no money in STEM... by orgenegro · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This is far far from true. I am a lawyer, please look up the statistics for unemployment in law, particularly young lawyers, and the number of people that are finding that the job that they can find doesn't pay their loan debt. There is even outsourcing (on large document review projects). Most people who went into law are finding that the law school lied to them about their future career prospects. A very large percentage of people who went to law school end up regretting it. The career you want to be in is anything health related with the boomers aging. There are people with AA degrees that make more than I do.

    6. Re:Because there is no money in STEM... by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

      Only a fool doesn't know that the most expensive thing in the world is the second best lawyer in a legal match.

      --
      That is all.
  16. Re:Real Reason by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 5, Informative

    So its either race with the rest of the rats in a rigged maze or you are "lazy"?

    Personally, I think that America has devalued intelligence, knowledge and hard work to the point that I can hardly blame someone who opts out. The "problem" that the powers that be are struggling with is that they want well-educated, well-trained (on someone else's dime, thanks) employees to work for returns that people of these qualities can figure out don't justify the effort.

    So they futz around and do other things, some productive, some not, but that at least match rewards to effort.

    Make engineering (or teaching etc.) a job worthy of a quality person's time and you will get an abundance of quality people. Make these careers a drag that requires a tremendous amount of risk and personal investment with the near guarantee that you will be screwed over within 5 years and you will only get people who think they can game the system.

  17. simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    replace meathead tv programming with shows like Cosmos.

    1. Re:simple solution by Grishnakh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      People aren't interested in shows like Cosmos. It's not like the TV networks are forcing people to watch Desperate Housewives; they show that junk because people like it and the ratings are high. PBS shows educational shows all the time, yet their ratings are lousy and they're constantly begging for money. Discovery Channel used to have lots of great educational programming, but then they found that people preferred to watch shows about moronic people building shitty motorcycles and arguing with each other constantly, so that's what they show now.

  18. Job availability is a big deal by Tragek · · Score: 4, Informative

    Being only a few hundred kilometres from major oil deposits, I see tonnes of people graduating from my institution with Petroleum engineering degrees. Do the majority of these people have a undying passion for the subject? Nope. The jobs are available, and they pay excellently, without having to risk fingers as a rig-pig. It's a smart choice.

    I would be curious though to see the employment rates across the US for degrees. Are there engineering degrees for which there is demand, and how does that break out of the overall statistics presented in the article.

    1. Re:Job availability is a big deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thing like petroleum engineering or gold mining seem to be things that people would only do for the money. I can imagine you'd find it interesting and challenging, but not more so than many other fields. It just pays way, way better due to the needs of our industrial society.

  19. Mod parent up. by khasim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If there really was a shortage then wages would rise.
    Rising wages mean more people try to get into that field.
    We're still hearing about the "shortage" but wages aren't going up.

    Instead, there are a lot of companies lobbying Congress for changes in the H-1B visa program to get more cheap engineers from overseas.

    It's about profits. Not a shortage of engineers.

    1. Re:Mod parent up. by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 1

      If there really was a shortage then wages would rise.

      What makes you think wages are not rising? To tell the truth, when I looked around the web for good statistics on historical wages I did not come up with much. Anybody have some links, for say, salaray trends by IT segment in the US over the last 20 years?

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
    2. Re:Mod parent up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Wages have started to go up in software development. Unemployment could be at less than 1% for only so long. At the beginning of the year, recruiting calls quadrupled and I have now started a new job with nearly double the salary.

    3. Re:Mod parent up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "It's about profits. Not a shortage of engineers."
          That's it. Anecdotal evidence follows. I worked 30 years for (redacted). I was promoted at a decent rate, with commensurate salary increases. I averaged 60 hour work weeks, 24/7, - no overtime, no comptime. I spent a decade in low-level management. I was sick an average of one day every two years, and I just let my vacation time lapse; in the time I was a Supervisor, I took a total of 23 days of vacation: two trips to Disneyland, one trip to Europe when my father died. The last couple of years, my Job Description was changing every six months- I was over 50, yet I was expected to master entirely new fields every six months.
          My last project was to redesign a complicated system intended to cool small samples to 12 Kelvin. The previous system in use by several teams for years was wildly inconsistent. My last appraisal focussed on shipping delays for systems sent for repair, (Uh, that's what we had a shipping department for.), my reluctance to learn Powerpoint, (I never really understood why, I never gave presentations, my Supervisor did.), and the slowness that my last project was taking since I was assigned it six months before.
          I walked away, and took early retirement, (At half of my previous salary.) I was replaced by a H-1B Postdoc, who worked at my retirement pay level. And my last project? Testing showed it didn't meet 12 Kelvin. It met 8 Kelvin, consistently. The papers on it don't mention me.
          I'm actually not bitter; I think it's rather funny - and I'm enjoying my early retirement. I'm finally getting around to restoring that old Ferrari that I bought when I was young and foolish.
          Oh, my old research team is now no longer ethnically diverse.

    4. Re:Mod parent up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      changes in the H-1B visa program to get more cheap engineers from overseas

      1) It's a global economy. The fact that North America was the one large industrial economy that wasn't pulverized into dust during WWII gave us a large leg up in the 1950s and 60s (Canada was at a bit of a disadvantage due to ties with England leading to a longer period at war). However the rest of the world has rebuilt (largely buying stuff from us) so they can now compete. Get over it - you can't rely on the economy of your parents and grandparents.

      2) The real reform would be to bring in the best and brightest under H1B or any other program. If they really prove themselves to be smart and motivated, grant them citizenship ASAP. As a 51yo engineer, I'd much rather be competing with a smart & competent engineer working for a company down the street than the same engineer working for Huawei/Wipro/etc across the ocean. It would be much better for my local economy, national economy, and personal future. Of course the xenophobes watching Faux News(tm) don't want that because that foriegn born engineer is somehow taking the job of their kid who barely graduated from high school with check book balancing skills....

    5. Re:Mod parent up. by notanalien_justgreen · · Score: 1

      The other issue is companies act like it's there god-given right to have access to a work force that is 100% trained for the job opening. Whatever happened to hiring smart people and training them for the job? People like Bill Gates argue we need more H-1B people because they're trained for the job. A lot of time those workers are not really well trained, they're just so cheap that a bit of training isn't a big deal.

      Companies need to get over themselves and offer wages that either entice people into the field or poach already trained people from other companies. I hate the double standard with regards to capitalism.

  20. "STEM" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is "STEM" really a homogeneous economic bloc? The author of this article seems to treat it this way, talking about various different fields interchangeably, but I've never seen statistics comparing different types of "STEM" jobs.

  21. Supply and demand by MetricT · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I can't find someone who'll sell me a Corvette for $10. That must mean there's a Corvette shortage...

    The MBA's, pols, and lobbyists that run our society can't seem to understand that supply and demand applies to other people as well. If the reward for several years of grad school were equal to the risk and cost, you'd see more people in STEM. That's why they went into finance, because that's where the money was.

    When the scientists and engineers make more money than the MBA's running the company, I'll imaging you won't have any problem finding them. (And I have both a MBA from a top 25 school and 12 years in high-performance computer. Guess who makes more around here...)

    When you say something is unimportant, and yet treat it as unimportant, people are smart enough to see through that.

  22. Simple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stop making STEM educated people compete with disposable Asians. Germany does this with aggressive trade regulation. Domestic demand for STEM will increase and wages will increase. STEM becomes attractive and students will appear.

    Of course, things that involve STEM labor will cost more... and we can't have that. Income disparity might stop growing.

    1. Re:Simple by tsotha · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Germany also has a pretty vibrant high-tech manufacturing sector, which requires people with all sorts of different skill sets. Part of the reason there isn't much demand in the US is we don't do much manufacturing any more, at least not on a per-capita basis.

    2. Re:Simple by Grishnakh · · Score: 0

      Won't work; everyone in America these days is screaming about the "Free Market", the Invisible Hand, etc., and wants to eliminate all regulation.

  23. other industries are protected by the govt by stanjo74 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Most jobs in a service economy are protected in some way by the government, with the exception of engineering jobs. Anything in medical, law, finance, accounting, etc. is protected from fierce international competition by local and federal rules and regulations.

    So, unless one's heart is really into it, why would anyone consider a career in engineering and science?

    1. Re:other industries are protected by the govt by ub3r+n3u7r4l1st · · Score: 5, Interesting

      And this is where the problem lies... most engineers (And IT people for that matter) are too isolated and only want to do their own thing. If they learn how to gang up and form unions and start lobbying you bet a lot of change will come this way.

    2. Re:other industries are protected by the govt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      What this is really all about is elites and their prestige - and their control. The globalist bankers who control us grew up believing they were special and in control. All of a sudden some American IT workers come along in the late 90s and revolutionize the entire world and the banksters had nothing to do with it. And we created an information system that they can't control. Suddenly they became dinosaurs no one listens to. They are enraged. They HATE American IT workers. Since India's workers are ranked SECOND FROM LAST in math & science worldwide, the elites have figured out they can DESTROY the IT industry by flooding it with these people. Every company these people touch dies. They are delusional. The bankers, lawyers, pols, doctors, and other elites saw their prestige EVAPORATE in the late 1990s. Killing our industry and keeping us out is their attempt to try to regain their prestige. Geeks are running the world right now and the elites can't stand it. We get more prestige than they do even though they have massive protection and we don't. These old, angry dinosaurs are FURIOUS at us and that is why STEM is under attack in America. They want a dumb stupid lower-class they can rule over at will and feel important about themselves.

  24. Follow the money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As an engineer or scientist, one can earn $30,000 to $50,000, or maybe $150,000 if you work very hard, are much more able than the average scientist or engineer, and are lucky. That is, until you're 45 - then you are put out to pack bags, pump gas or supersize people.

    In the financial industry, some one with a bit of intelligence can reap $50,000 to $150,000 in junior posiitons and $1,000,000 to $50,000,000 or more in senior positions.

    Why would anyone smart enough to be an engineer or scientist want to be one, given the disparity how societies wealth is distributed?

    1. Re:Follow the money... by nomadic · · Score: 1

      The financial industry is lucrative for only a very small number of people. If you don't go to a small handful of MBA programs, you ain't getting on Wall Street. And entry-level financial industry people are going to start at $40k to $50k if they're lucky, and can work for many years without getting much higher.

    2. Re:Follow the money... by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      Maybe, but engineers graduating from the most elite engineering schools aren't going to ever make $1-50 million, unless they start their own company (which means they're no longer an engineer, but an entrepreneur, which is rather different and engineering school doesn't train you for this).

    3. Re:Follow the money... by tjb · · Score: 1

      Where do people get this shit in there head? Almost every decent company in silicon valley starts their junior engineers at $70k (or more) and after 5-7 years they will be at $110k-130k (minimum - Cisco and google, to name a couple, pay significantly more) - sure it may not be millions, but engineering is certainly a nice middle class profession with a much more stable outlook than law or finance (if you are any good at it and willing to go where the action is)

  25. Re:Real Reason by travisco_nabisco · · Score: 1

    In a recent Wired article, Feb issue perhaps, there was a short one page feature on how across history the geniuses that made major strides came in clusters. The analysis was that great strides in a field are made when there is a focus and priority put on it, which we appear to be missing in the Engineering disciplines right now.

    The final observation was that we are fostering a huge nation of geniuses, they just happen to be geniuses in sports.

  26. A lack of respect? by Kylon99 · · Score: 1

    Perhaps people sense that companies only respect the financial jobs these days as upper management is only concerned with pure dollars and cents. Anything to do with engineering is beyond their ability to manage intangibles and thus barely tolerated and utterly replaceable.

    And so if you ask me, would you get into a career where management wouldn't recognize your work and threaten to replace you? Or would you go where you are respected... for raking in the money.

    (Of course, I'm not really interested in that, but you gotta admit it's a huge draw.)

  27. Maybe the problem lies with the universities? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    Has anybody tried making the hard science university experience less of brutal and life consuming Darwinian struggle??

    1. Re:Maybe the problem lies with the universities? by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

      I never found it particularly brutal. Did I have to study? Yes. But you should have to do that in school. Life consuming? Not really... I had plenty of time to participate in "extracurricular activities" during my college career, including many chemical-substance fueled ones. Darwinian struggle? Not even close. I found most of my fellow students non-competitive and, in fact, helpful. If you want brutal, life consuming, and Darwinian, the pre-med line starts over by the Chemistry department.

      --
      That is all.
  28. Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by ad454 · · Score: 2

    I work for a major semi-conductor company in Silicon Valley (California USA), and we have been desperately looking for talented micro-controller firmware software developers and/or hardware engineers that are proficient with wired data-link protocols (UART, SPI, I2C, 1-wire, ISO7816-3, etc.) for nearly a year, and offering a 6 figure salary.

    All of the applicants I came across, are either desktop/server developers that have no clue how to develop for a MCU with only a few kB of RAM and EEPROM, or an old school hardware engineer that is not familiar with the above mentioned wired data-link protocols.

    If anyone is interested, please send me a PM.

    1. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In my youth companies would hire a talented engineer out of school and have him work with an experienced designer in the field to develop skills in a technical specialty such as this, and hang on to him for dear life once the skills were developed. Now the idea is that these specialists are just spring up to meet need and can be let go the instance such needs are fulfilled.

      Well what happens is the skills don't get developed that way, and nobody is interested in going $100,000 in debt to get what amounts to be a temporary job.

    2. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by nomadic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well heaven forbid you actually train someone to do it. That's why you can't find anybody, every company wants instant gratification with no work.

    3. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by russotto · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I work for a major semi-conductor company in Silicon Valley (California USA), and we have been desperately looking for talented micro-controller firmware software developers and/or hardware engineers that are proficient with wired data-link protocols (UART, SPI, I2C, 1-wire, ISO7816-3, etc.) for nearly a year, and offering a 6 figure salary.

      So find someone with a clue and maybe some experience in related areas (e.g. kernel or device driver development), and hire them. I've done microcontroller firmware and had to bit-bang both SPI and I2C, and neither one is rocket science; I learned on the job from the data sheets. Stop looking for the purple squirrel -- the candidate who has exactly the experience you need on the tools you use -- and start hiring people who have the basic skills. This is still difficult, but it's a lot less difficult than looking for the niche candidate who probably already has a job with your competition.

      (I'm on the wrong coast and am currently employed doing something else, sorry)

    4. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by leftover · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ad454 I believe you but think you are missing something. You, as the technical person, are not seeing any candidates because the generation who cut that technology with their own teeth are too old to get past HR.

      My experience spans the development of those protocols; there is a veritable museum's worth of 7816 prototypes in my basement; there are ARM, PIC and MSP430 projects-in-process in front of me right now and I would very much like a job as you describe. You would never even see my resume because I am sixty-something. Anyone who is not sixty-something would not have my experience. Anyone trained in 'software' now would have started with GUI toolkits and unlimited memory. Hardware people are using UML design leading to implementation in astonishingly capable programmable logic devices.

      Many of the posts above hit the nail on the head: the MBA managers deliberately under-value the contribution of engineering to their own wealth. They pretend that they somehow create wealth by having meetings. The same people use some of that money to buy politicians at all levels. They also write business textbooks to further solidify their dogma.

      Meh. I'll get off your lawn now.

      --
      Bent, folded, spindled, and mutilated.
    5. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      WTF? I2C and the like have been around for decades; I did I2C bit-banging on an MCU in college back in '95. The others aren't much different. The old-school HW engineers could easily figure that stuff out, these protocols are not complicated.

      Maybe your problem is you're too cheap. 6 figures in Silicon Valley is peanut pay. If you were in Nebraska or Tennessee or wherever, that'd be a very good salary, but that's nothing in SV. Any employee making that will have to commute 1-2 hours each way to find an affordable place to live.

    6. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I've interviewed people for all sorts of engineering jobs and I've never found anyone who was a "perfect fit." No one can ever tick off all your boxes. You have to pick someone with reasonably related experience who is smart enough to figure out what they need to learn on their own. If you are afraid that won't guarantee results for you, then hire two smart people instead of one and they can figure it out together.

      As a side note, what you're describing as far as job knowledge is not rare or strange. I work with people who could do that kind of work (as could I), but we're all happy with our current jobs.

      And as far as "6 figure salary." I assume that's a euphemism for around $100k/year. How much will this person's manager be paid? And that manager's manager? How about the executive team? How much profit sharing is there? What? There isn't any profit sharing for engineers? It's almost as if you don't give a shit about the people you want to work for you and you can't figure out why no one will bite.

    7. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a tractable problem with at least two solutions:

      1. Offer 7 figures instead of 6.
      2. Hire a desktop/server developer and train him.

    8. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by bzipitidoo · · Score: 1

      You're too picky. What's wrong with indulging in ... a little training? (gasp!) You're willing to pony up a 6 figure salary, but not do any training at all?

      You talk as if developing for a MCU takes years of training and experience. It doesn't. Plenty of smart people could pick it up quickly. Of course you disagree. I could do it, and do it well, but you wouldn't even think of hiring a guy like me. I've only heard of 1-wire because I've seen a driver for that in the Linux kernel. Well, that's your problem. If MCUs really are that hard, then I'd say it's not inherently hard, it's a problem with poor documentation, bad environments, and bad designs.

      --
      Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    9. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Eric+Smith · · Score: 1

      Is ther e a way to send a PM on Slashdot? I've got the skills you need, and am available. You can email me at

    10. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I work for a major semi-conductor company in Silicon Valley (California USA), and we have been desperately looking for talented micro-controller firmware software developers and/or hardware engineers that are proficient with wired data-link protocols (UART, SPI, I2C, 1-wire, ISO7816-3, etc.) for nearly a year, and offering a 6 figure salary.

      All of the applicants I came across, are either desktop/server developers that have no clue how to develop for a MCU with only a few kB of RAM and EEPROM, or an old school hardware engineer that is not familiar with the above mentioned wired data-link protocols.

      If anyone is interested, please send me a PM.

      Instead of looking for the exact person for a year, you should have hired someone with less experience a year ago for less than a 6-figure income and then trained them. Then after they are trained, bump their salary up a bit to keep them around. The salary could have averaged out over a couple years to what you were willing to pay someone who is already trained.

      Afraid they will leave after they are trained? Well maybe they are afraid you will fire them after the specific project is done. So create a contract with a probationary period and both parties will be happy.

    11. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by ace37 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Rather than holding on for dear life, they could try giving the guy an unsolicited big raise when he's worth more money. Then he wouldn't be inclined to jump ship.

    12. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I'm correct (and I'm looking for EE work right now, so I bet I am), then your company is being idiotic with your experience requirements and demanding something like 5-7 years experience. Considering you're asking for someone to work on protocols which are built straight into just about every MCU made in the last 10 years, demanding anything more than a basic knowledge of any of those is absurd.

      Also, if you're looking for someone with prior experience, saying that you're offering 6 figures in Si-Valley is meaningless. 100k to 120k is really low. I only have 1 year of work experience, but I wouldn't go to Silicon Valley for 100k.

    13. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      and offering a 6 figure salary.

      You get six figures in Silicon Valley by being semi-competent with 5 years experience. If you want someone with specialized skills, you're looking at $130k to $170k.

      Unless you want them to be an exact match, and aren't willing to let them learn on the job. Then be prepared to pay $200k+

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    14. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by michael_cain · · Score: 4, Informative

      You would never even see my resume because I am sixty-something.

      Very true, at least in part. There are currently good reasons for HR to quietly dispose of the resumes from people over about the age of 55. One is that they are part of a protected group -- so in the event of a sizable layoff, there would be a bunch of extra hoops to jump through to demonstrate that there was no discrimination against older workers. Note that the case law on this is generally that there doesn't have to be intent to discriminate, you're guilty even if it just worked out that way. Second is if your firm has health insurance benefits. Through no fault of their own, 55 is about the dividing line where degenerative diseases -- heart disease, cancer, strokes -- quit being unusual. Particularly at small firms, group premiums will increase sharply as you add older workers.

      For the second item, 33 of 34 OECD countries have figured out the answer -- single-payer health financing, or heavy regulation of the insurance companies so that the system functions as a virtual single-payer system. In that situation, hiring an older worker has the same effect on the firm's payments into the health care system as hiring a young worker. As a side effect -- US governments at all levels spend a bigger share of GDP on health care than almost all of the other OECD countries; but in the US that only pays for the elderly, the poor, and government employees (including the military and their dependents), while in the other 33 they manage to provide for the entire population.

    15. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by bitingduck · · Score: 1

      I work with a guy who's 60-something who does all that and more. Probably a pretty similar background to you. He's a great analog designer, can write firmware, can write software, and can do serious optics. And he's a great guy to work with. It will be a bummer when he finally decides to retire.

    16. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      I think it's fair to say he should train people on the protocols. They're not rocket science, I2C and SPI in particular are easy easy.

      The part that isn't easy to train is how to code on the particular platform he has. Younger people who would jump on a 6 figure salary aren't trained that way anymore, and hacking assembly in mom's basement went out the door quite a while back. It actually takes quite a bit of practice and experience.

    17. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Stop looking for the purple squirrel -- the candidate who has exactly the experience you need on the tools you use

      THIS. I am capable of writing just about any type of software or firmware you can put in front of me - any of assembler, C/C++, Java, Scala/Clojure, Haskell, Python, etc., and steer my way around oscilloscopes, logic analyzers, JTAG units, ICEs, and so forth. Not only that, within 2-3 weeks of starting at a company I can be completely productive - writing code, documentation, code reviews, etc., and my interpersonal and communications skills with other team members is exceptional (I mean engineering exceptional, not sales/marketing exceptional.)

      I've been (almost) continuously employed during my career (outside of a 2-3 week sudden layoff a few months after 9/11), and I haven't had too much trouble finding employment, but getting my resume through corporate HR or hiring managers that are looking for specific buzzwords is really difficult. Most of them can't seem to fathom how I can pick up what I need to know in such a short amount of time.

    18. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Animats · · Score: 1

      Well heaven forbid you actually train someone to do it. That's why you can't find anybody, every company wants instant gratification with no work.

      Exactly. Find someone who understands some modern low level electrical interfaces, like USB. Expect them to take about a month to pick up each new one (old one, actually) you need.

      (What's 1-wire being used for? Most of the "key" type applications have been superseded by some kind of RFID tag. Anyone still have a Java Button?)

    19. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by darenw · · Score: 1

      Oooh! Hire me!!

      I think this is a fine example of something I suspect goes on a lot: employers think that each piece of technology and language and protocol that has a name or acronym should be listed on a candidate's resume, while smart potential employees think it's not worth diluting their resume with all the 'obvious' things. I mean, my resume doesn't have 'writing' or 'soldering' or give any clue that I can eat or drive a car or have been potty trained.

      Potential Boss: So, your resume doesn't list "potty-trained." Can you comment on that?
      Candidate (blushing): Um, yeah, well this is kinda embarrassing, but, er, my parents, uh, never actually...

      So maybe it's wise for smart people to add something like 'can figure out new and unknown electronic protocols pretty darn quick' but then a hundred other 'can figure out...' type things deserve just as well to be written. A resume full of mush like that, however true, becomes unfocused.

      It's really more a matter of employers understanding the word 'smart' better.

    20. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Alioth · · Score: 1

      Well train someone who has the innate ability. SPI, I2C etc. are not exactly rocket science. Find an old school hardware engineer who has an ability to learn and you're set. Or a desktop/server developer who has an ability to learn and you're all set.

    21. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Any employee making that will have to commute 1-2 hours each way to find an affordable place to live.

      Maybe your standards are artificially high? There are plenty of places with affordable rent in downtown SF. Mind you, they don't have garages or lawns or spare bedrooms, or maybe even any bedrooms. But unless you've got a large family, most space in the average American home goes wasted anyway.

    22. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      6 figure salary? 6 figures is anything from 100,000 to 999,999. Don't equivocate; man up and be specific.
      Also, what's the median home price in Silicon Valley? Based on a salary of 100K, anything over $250K is not affordable. Yes, it's an old rule (mortgage should be less than or equal to 2.5 times the household income), but it's tried and true. Bullshit like "interest only mortgages" is tried and failed.
      So, unless real estate prices in Silicon Valley go way down or that "six figure salary" your company is offering is considerably more than 100K, your company is window dressing. I'm not at all surprised you can't find your perfect candidate.

    23. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I work for a major semi-conductor company in Silicon Valley (California USA), and we have been desperately looking for talented micro-controller firmware software developers and/or hardware engineers that are proficient with wired data-link protocols (UART, SPI, I2C, 1-wire, ISO7816-3, etc.) for nearly a year, and offering a 6 figure salary.

      All of the applicants I came across, are either desktop/server developers that have no clue how to develop for a MCU with only a few kB of RAM and EEPROM, or an old school hardware engineer that is not familiar with the above mentioned wired data-link protocols.

      If anyone is interested, please send me a PM.

      So hire a couple of bright kids on five-figure salaries. Have them do testing and QC for a month or two; don't let them write any code or do any design work but let them see the source and the specs and figure out the problems. After a couple of weeks, sit them down with a senior engineer and ask them how they would implement an issue. Their answer will probably be lousy. Give them hints, show them the solutions, and have them try again. When their answers start to make sense, you've got your person; promote them into the real position.

      With luck, you'll have trained up at least one of them in about six months. Yes, that takes some time and some hand-holding from the senior engineers. The reward is, you get exactly who you need, and you get to evaluate them as an employee before you commit to them.

    24. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (I have no intention of moving, especially to silly valley, so I'm certainly not asking for myself.) What's the ramp up time for a smart person, say one of the "old school hardware engineer[s]" that you mentioned, to pick up this stuff? Is it prohibitive to hire someone and let them learn on the job? I'm a software engineer but I like interfacing with hardware; the OS course at Waterloo ("All hope abandon, all ye who enter here") was a lot of fun for me; a long time ago I used to write in machine code before I got an assembler, and grok writing size-optimized code.

      How far are you/your company willing to go to give someone with solid engineering knowledge a chance to pick up the details? From the (little) I know / can look up about these particular protocols, they don't seem all that complex. New people are going to have a few weeks of ramp-up anyway. Hire yourself someone with appropriate general knowledge with aptitude to learn the specifics quickly.

    25. Re:Some Niche Engineering Jobs Needed by lordlod · · Score: 1

      I'm a programmer and electrical engineer with the kind of experience you are looking for. I've debugged UARTs, multi-device SPI, played with a fair few ATMELs and spent a few years with a small proprietary processor I've tried to scrub from my memory.

      I am also finishing up my current contract in about a month. So (after a holiday) I will be back in the job market soon.

      Unfortunately I'm not competent enough to figure out how to send a PM through slashdot.

      So email me, ad454-5-lod at spamgourmet.com I would be interested in knowing what companies are looking for this type of expertise, even if it doesn't lead anywhere.

  29. Re:Real Reason by sexconker · · Score: 1, Funny

    Nope. There isn't anyone that won't try to have a rewarding career "because the government make sure they get a certain quality of life." If someone isn't trying to be successful in life "the government will take care of me" is certainly *never* the reason. Even the think tanks that spread this bullshit propaganda know it isn't true. No matter how many times it's repeated it still won't be true.

    You typed this out knowing full well the utter sloth that pervades all of American society.

  30. ugh by nomadic · · Score: 2

    The problem with STEM is the same problem with all white collar jobs: Our country and our planet just do not need nearly as many college-educated professionals as it produces. A lot of the entry-level (but previously somewhat lucrative grunt work) can now be done with computers, and ubiquitous communications networks quicken the work that does have to be done.

    STEM grads don't have it nearly as bad as architects or lawyers these days but I'm sure they'll get there.

    1. Re:ugh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difficulty of a STEM education will keep it from getting as bad as architects and lawyers. It may get worse, just not that bad.

    2. Re:ugh by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Well, first of all, I don't think architecture is that easy (though I am not an architect, but I have discussed the curriculum with some). Getting a law degree and passing the bar is not that difficult, though being a good lawyer is very difficult. In any event, honestly, STEM majors aren't quite as hard as STEM people like to brag about. I did some substantive coursework in STEM subjects at both the undergrad and grad level and they could be challenging but were not as bad as some STEM people like to pretend.

  31. Native MD's In the UK by siphonophore · · Score: 2

    For an informative glimpse into the future of STEM in the US, look to the MD profession in the UK. Public policy removed financial incentives from the doctors and students wised up quickly. Today there are very few native-born physicians in the UK; they all come with modest financial expectations from countries with a lower standard of living.

    Physicians can't perform their jobs from abroad. Scientists and engineers, however...

    --
    Dance like you're hurt, Love like you need money, and work when somebody's watching.
    -Scott Adams
    1. Re:Native MD's In the UK by Nursie · · Score: 2

      LOL.

      While there are a lot of Doctors from around the world in the UK, you clearly have no idea how much they can and do make. Six figures (in pounds) is really not uncommon. Surgeons and specialists make very good money by working both private and public sectors.

      Yes, you can make more in the US, it's true. That's about the only truth in your post.

    2. Re:Native MD's In the UK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK maybe there was some exaggeration there.

      http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC516656/figure/fig1/

      Still, the UK imports doctors and the reason is probably financial dis-incenting of the profession

    3. Re:Native MD's In the UK by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1

      The financial disincentive is the debt you must get into to train : a medical degree consumes 5 years, rather than the usual 3. In addition, the latter years of the degree have a much higher ratio of work to leave than a typical undergraduate degree course - in my 4th year, I had 4 weeks of leave, all of which were spent cramming for exams. In previous years, I had been able to work labour jobs over the summer to supplement my living expenses. By the end of my fourth year, I had an overdraft.

      When I studied, there were no tuition fees, and students were still eligible for the "student grant", which together with student loans and a small stipend from my parents, kept my bank balance in the black until the end of that fourth year. Not without sacrifice - unlike my colleagues who seemed to be out boozing every night, my largest luxuries were a pizza and a few pints on a Saturday night. Oh, and a lack of crippling debt.

      Fast forward to this century, where UK students are liable for tuition fees. My old alma mater charges £9,000 per annum - the maximum permitted. You can expect most medical schools to do the same. That's more than 3 years worth of the loans I took (adjusted for inflation, that £9,000 would have been worth about £5,300). My living expenses used to be about £3,000 per annum ; in today's money that's more like £5,000, which would give you a debt of about £70,000 at the end of it, assuming you have no source of income - which is not unreasonable, given that you are studying hard (9 to 5 every day, unlike the liberal arts courses with their 2 hours of scheduled lectures a week).

      The average reported level of debt is £24,092 for 2011 ; however, tuition fees have only recently risen to their current levels ; prior to 2012, they capped out at £3,290 per annum. You can expect the attendance at medical school to drop like a stone this year.

    4. Re:Native MD's In the UK by Elky+Elk · · Score: 1

      WTF, there are loads of native physicians in the UK, they are very well paid and they don't have Medical doctorates, they have a Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery.

  32. Salaries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As long as you can get 10 (or more) times more money in the financial sector, a lot of high professionals will go there. Also today, STEM topics are nerd territory in the public opinion. The bad connotation decreases the number of potential candidates for those jobs.

  33. Shortage of track record... by slew · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In my experience, the problem you are observing with STEM career track is a systematic problem.

    Often the folks that are coming into industry from graduate or post-graduate university are looking for a job where they can apply their newly minted skills (let's call that a mid-entry job for argument's sake). Most managers in industry are looking for people that can help them work out problems and are willing to hire smart people and throw them on the job to learn (let's call that an entry-level job for argument's sake), or folks that can help them that are already skilled in the industry who already have lots of experience (let's call that a job for an highly experienced person). Which is basically what you have observed.

    Of course there are some jobs for folks that work on advanced projects that require more than entry level experience, but perhaps less than highly experience level. Maybe that is some type of "entry-mid" level job you might be interested in?

    Here's the dillema. If you were a hiring manager, would you promote someone that you've seen working on an entry-level basis for a few years to that new advanced project, or hire what we like to call a new-college-grad++ for that position? Well, I can tell you that NCG++ had better knock my socks off before I'd take the risk to hire that person over promoting someone that I know is a smart and a hard worker. That's because hiring new folks is really a crap shoot (sometimes you win, sometimes you lose). Also, if I hire the NCG++ from outside, an inside person that I might have promoted might decide to take off to another company and we'd lose the institutional knowledge that came with that person as they walk out the door to a competitor. As a result, some of these positions just aren't open to outside folks.

    Basically, it sounds like you are trying to "retrack" a STEM career from academia to industry. That's is one of the problems built into the system. Mid-career track in academia generally involves lots of publishing and research (which tends to be in one narrow area if you are only doing something for 3 years) where industry tends to value generalized knowledge or dotting "i's" and crossing "t's" on problems on its mid-career folks.

    The only advice I have is that if you want to re-track your career at mid-track, you need to get data points on your resume where it shows you can dot i's and cross t's and have lots of general field knowledge (not 2-years of papers in a very narrow area). If you don't you probably have to wait it out until you get 5-10 years of experience at something specific where you can qualify for a highly experienced job in that more narrow area on its own merit, or you can take an entry level job and hope to wow someone. Sometimes that works too. In most successful companies, it doesn't often matter at what level you are hired in, as long as the company lets the good people bubble-up (and most successful companies have this attribute in common). Good luck.

  34. Top US college majors - a thought by TheSync · · Score: 2

    Top US college majors are 1) Business 2) Social sciences and history 3) Health professions and related clinical sciences 4) Education 5) Psychology 6) Visual and performing arts.

    How can one say that health fields are not a form of applied science? Business has a reasonable amount of math in terms of finance and there is plenty of statistics in business process management such as six-sigma. Social sciences are of course a form of science, and even educators need to learn about the science of childhood development and scientific results about what works in the classroom.

    The truth is that there is a large demand for professional businesspeople, health professionals, and educators in the US.

    On the other hand, I think most people would not be studying social sciences, history, psychology, or art if these majors did not receive significant subsidy either directly from tax dollars in state schools or indirectly in government loans (that end up not getting paid off). If students had to pay the full way on these majors up front, they would pretty much vanish!

    1. Re:Top US college majors - a thought by thrich81 · · Score: 1

      Disclaimer -- coming from a physics and elec engineering degree holder. There are 'hard' sciences and there is everything else.
      1) Business -- I haven't taken any business classes lately but did take the first two Economics classes required in the Business curriculum at my undergrad school -- A+ in both classes, easiest of my whole undergrad curriculum. All you had to do was know what the definition of a derivative was and that was half the math you needed to know. Now, the real economists do some serious math but not the watered down stuff the business majors get.
      2) Health professions -- you have to learn (I mean memorize) a bunch of science to get through the MCATS and into med school but after that it is all memorization and pure endurance, so my doctor friends tell me. Doctors are usually pretty bright but they aren't doing science in their daily work, any more than car mechanics are in diagnosing engine problems.
      3) Social sciences -- it's not science if you can "prove" any hypothesis which you can dream up. Social sciences suffer from the same defect that many non-science fields of "knowledge" do -- assertions in the field are rarely falsifiable. Same holds for Education.

    2. Re:Top US college majors - a thought by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1

      med school [...] is all memorization and pure endurance

      Agreed, and so is the profession itself, one of the reasons I couldn't hack it and quit after a year. If you love people, medicine will be fine for you. If you bore easily without constant intellectual stimulation, do not study medicine.

    3. Re:Top US college majors - a thought by TheSync · · Score: 1

      All you had to do was know what the definition of a derivative was

      Yes, but what percentage of Americans do you think know what the definition of a derivative is? Only 6% of US high school students currently take calculus. I suspect no more than 20% of college students take calculus. I would guestimate that no more than 5% of Americans in general (of all ages now living) know what a derivative is.

  35. Passion by ocratato · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Most of these solutions seem to be getting the cart before the horse.

    Back in the early '70s, in Australia at least, you could get a university education almost for free. The result was that students studied what they had a passion for without worrying too much about what career they would end up with. The lucky ones got the careers they wanted, others with a real passion started businesses, and the rest ended up as teachers where they taught with that same passion.

    Now a universtiy education is so expensive that it must be carefully tailored to where the good paying jobs already are. The passion has been lost, and along with it the good teachers and the innovative engineers - like those that started Sun, HP, etc.

    Society has to put the investment back into education if it wants to get the rewards. Give the kids that education and they will go out and dream up new businesses that we cannot even begin to imagine.

    1. Re:Passion by magamiako1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There is, it's called not fucking our economy over for decades of a recession. It's a direct investment in our country's personal well being. Look a bit further than the tip of your nose when you make comments.

    2. Re:Passion by zaydana · · Score: 2

      Which one is preferable? You pay for that literature degree, or they pay for something "useful" and then join Lehman Brothers? Its a bit like how it would of been better for everybody if Hitler had of gone to arts school, even if someone had to pay for his education.

      On the other hand, if we let people study what they are passionate about, we get passionate engineers, teachers, etc. who will cause a much greater benefit for society than those who only study to get the Beamer.

    3. Re:Passion by lightknight · · Score: 1

      Two degrees -> one in a practical application, and one in a enrichment in life application.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    4. Re:Passion by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1

      It sounds like the Concent structures in Anathem (Neal Stephenson) ; essentially an order of "Monks of Thinking Shit Up" ; each member has two occupations - their academic pursuit, and something else like beekeeping or stonemasonry to fall back on should they turn out to be a dumbass.

    5. Re:Passion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      80% of the aussies I've met have marine biology degrees and are unemployed

    6. Re:Passion by GerryGilmore · · Score: 1

      God Bless you, Citizen! Not everything in the world maps into your (collective you: tax-haters) Cartman-like "It's *MY* money, dammit!" mentality. Taxes/evil government exist to do those big things, like making a better society possible, that individuals cannot reasonably do, well, individually. Now that we've built out a great national infrastructure of education, seems like we're determined to let it rot on the vine.

    7. Re:Passion by GerryGilmore · · Score: 1

      Oops - when I said "your..." I meant the parent post....

    8. Re:Passion by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Or more to the point, given that taxes are collected under the threat of violence, there better be a darn good reason to tax people to pay for someone else's education.

      Have you considered that we already tax people to pay for someone else's education?

  36. Stanford CS enrollment all time high (cyclic) by peter303 · · Score: 1

    Stanford computer science enrollment of undergraduates more less tracks IPO fever in SIlicon Valley with peaks in the late 1990s and now . The same trend was observed at MIT. In both places 85% of the undergraduates are US citizens and 65% are women and/or minorities. This seems to say that quick money is the draw.

    In the ivies 20% to 40% of undergraduates take jobs in financial services, with the number directly tracking the salaries offered in these fields too. The mid 2000s was a peak, late 2000s a low.

  37. Conflict of interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The government is mostly led by lawyers. They have no desire for competent people who want things to work. They certainly don't want people who understand anything or can run numbers.

    Instead, they endow legal schools to create more of their own kind.

    1. Re:Conflict of interest by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Lawyers don't want to create more of their own kind, they already do a lot to artificially limit the supply of lawyers to keep their pay high.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  38. Because degrees are important? by Brian+Feldman · · Score: 1

    I don't understand why we place so much value in a system which is obviously meant to make money more than it is to educate. It is an abomination that job availability discriminates upon the boundaries of how much in debt the candidate is willing to be rather than upon merits of their knowledge. Academy is a life-long pursuit, and some people simply do not learn in rigid environments. Even for the ones that do learn well in a public school or a university, most of their eventual useful knowledge is gonna come from where? That's right: life experience.

    Fuck the system.

    --
    Brian Fundakowski Feldman
  39. my liberal arts college had 2 girls for every guy by sconeu · · Score: 3, Funny

    You went to Surf City Tech?

    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  40. Can't Have your Pi and Eat it Too by paleo2002 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The government complains about a lack of scientists and engineers as it continues to cut funding to education across the board at the state and federal levels.

    K-12 schools can't afford to give their teachers cost-of-living raises or even hire new, competent teachers in some cases. Colleges are raising tuition year after year despite overcrowding because attendance is up but funding is down. Schools in general have trouble keeping their labs and equipment up to date due to budget cuts as well. Less money for science and math teachers leads to fewer students pursing science and math in college. This leads to fewer science/math professionals, including fewer good teachers. And so on . . .

    When a government begins attacking education - banning printing presses, burning books, defunding schools, demonizing teachers' unions - its because they want a stupid, docile populace. If you're raising sheep, don't expect to get anything more than wool out of them.

    1. Re:Can't Have your Pi and Eat it Too by ErikZ · · Score: 1

      Really? You think lack of education is the biggest problem?

      Not lack of jobs for STEM people?

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    2. Re:Can't Have your Pi and Eat it Too by JackPepper · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Tax money spent on government education has more than doubled on a per pupil basis in the last 30 years.

      In K-12 education, no results have been seen since the customer, guardians, have no involvement in the pricing, i.e. tuition, pay. This leads to a lack of quality, since the customer is told to take the product, education, as is or pay an exorbitant amount of money, private schooling.

      Colleges are a mess due to the ridiculous subsidizing that occurs with their customer. The more customers the college gets the more funding, government loans, the college gets. This drives prices skyward.

      I'd say banning printing presses and burning books is in general a bad sign. Partially defunding schools without making alternatives available is worse than continuing to fund them. I say demonize the whole failed government education system. Teachers' unions are part of the failed government education system that perpetuates the ideas that only the government can educate children.

      The government complains about plenty of things in which it's already heavily involved. The last thing those sectors need is the government to start helping.

    3. Re:Can't Have your Pi and Eat it Too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Teacher unions? Give me a break!

      Let me rant In the 1960's when my father got a big promotion and then could afford to take me out of the public school system and send me to a private elementary school, I experience first hand how much I was missing and how far behind I was in math and science courses. Thank God, for my sixth grade teacher, Ms. Barbara Lewis - who I hated at the time, but now I love - made me work every math problem until I got it correct – even if I had to miss recess. Now I am a Mechanical engineer, and I enjoy my job very much. For me, designing machinery is a blast. I have so much fun that I just can not wait for tomorrow to get to work and design another world record breaker; even if my pay is just slightly below the national average for my experience and the area I live in.

      The problem I see is that companies used to consider their engineering staff as an asset to their organization, but now companies are more interested in maximizing quick profits than making a quality product, thus engineers are now seen as a liability. The attitude I see is that managers think that they can hire fresh out of school engineers with no experience, arm them with 3D modeling and FEA software to produce a design. Thus, thinking more valuable, experienced engineers are replaceable. The results I am seeing are products that have an appealing aesthetic design but are falling in delivering the type of extra performance and endurance that makes a product legendary, standing out among its competitive peers. Managers seem to be content in making the sale and dispatching service techs to fix/patch the flaws after the machine is delivered. Thus, I see no pride, or passion among the engineering staff. If the company exhibits pride it is most likely shallow pride drummed up by a sales, or a PR team.

    4. Re:Can't Have your Pi and Eat it Too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What crap. K-12 districts can't afford to give their teachers raises etc because the fucking unions at every level of state and now federal government have spent future generations' entire earnings on entitlement obligations that can NEVER be repaid. The entire country is financially bankrupt but no one wants to say it out loud.

      Throwing money at education = epic FAIL

    5. Re:Can't Have your Pi and Eat it Too by strack · · Score: 2

      "Tax money spent on government education has more than doubled on a per pupil basis in the last 30 years." is that adjusted for inflation?

    6. Re:Can't Have your Pi and Eat it Too by PhloppyPhallus · · Score: 1

      Exactly. The problem isn't education; the US has the best university system in the world, bar none. For all of the talk about it, even our elementary and secondary schools systems are good, and we have a huge spread in quality (directly related to economic inequality) such that while we have a number of really bad schools in poor areas, we also have many world-class schools in middle and upper class areas.

      The real problem is that our society doesn't value STEM these days. One obvious factor is that salaries aren't high enough to encourage Americans to enter technical fields--but it's not just the money. R&D funding is at an all time low, so there are fewer exciting things to motivate students to enter technical fields. We're no longer seriously taking on huge engineering projects like hypersonic aircraft, space elevators, manned missions to points outside Earth orbit, or alternative sources of power. We talk the talk, but when it comes down to it, the funding is slowly ratcheted down year after year. This is the stuff that inspires children to dream of becoming engineers, but instead these dreams from the early 80s seem to be drifting farther and farther from reality. You can't ramp R&D up overnight either--real progress takes sustained effort over many years, and you start falling back as soon as you let up on the gas.

      A lack of exciting projects is correlated to a lack of cultural interest in science and technology. People don't seem to care anymore about space exploration or fusion power. We have an entire political movement which denies global warming, regardless of the evidence, and smaller groups who are so mistrustful and misunderstanding of science that they oppose things like vaccination or the fundamentals of whole fields like geology and biology. We have a culture where television programming about science can't survive, and people from all walks of life take pride in their ignorance of basic math and science. I don't know what causes this, and I'm not sure how to fix it. In 1957 Sputnik scared America straight, and kicked off two generations of sustained investment in STEM, which contributed in part to the cultural, economic, and military dominance the US has enjoyed since. The dominance is waning, but when China announces a space exploration program and then begins to deliver on it in record time, America doesn't even seem to notice. I'm not sure what it'll take to change things. It's easy to blame politicians for their poor priorities, but in this case, they really are reflecting the will of the people. Can America aspire to technological brilliance again?

    7. Re:Can't Have your Pi and Eat it Too by JackPepper · · Score: 1

      Good question. http://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=66

      I haven't checked the fact checker.

  41. Re:Real Reason by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    Well, government's responsible for policing the corporations, because they're the only ones with that power. And government is accountable to the people, and elected by them. So if the people suck at electing a decent government and the corporations are running amok, the only alternative I can think of is to move to another country.

  42. Shortage of bona fide job offers by bzipitidoo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There's a lot of dishonesty in the job market. Qualified job seekers are rejected all the time.

    When an employer asks for 10 years of experience in 20 different languages, systems, applications, and platforms, that could say they don't want to hire anyone. They actually want to hire a cheap foreigner, or the boss's nephew, and are just going through the motions to satisfy the letter of EEOA requirements. They've already found their man, and just copied his resume to the job posting. If the position goes unfilled, then they can complain that there aren't enough qualified applicants no matter the real reason it wasn't filled. In a bigger company, there could be internal politicking going on, with one department using the hordes of hapless job applicants to send a message to other departments. It could also say they have to ask for that much so they aren't buried under resumes. Which of course happens because contrary to what they claim, there is in fact no shortage of qualified job seekers.

    To add to the fun, there are the head hunters throwing out bait, to harvest resumes.

    And job seekers are pressured to spin and exaggerate to the max without quite lying (wink, wink). Quite common for a good programmer to pick up a programming language quick, then apply for a job that asks for 10 years experience in it, and if hired, pull it off because as we all know, programming ability is not language specific.

    Another factor that shows there is no shortage of qualified people is that employers can demand that new hires "hit the ground running". In other words, applicants are expected to bone up on whatever specific technologies are wanted on their own time and dime, rather than spend a month training. Employers don't train people anymore. They've externalized that cost, and gotten away with it, demanding that schools and applicants do that. They complain bitterly that schools don't educate people right, which too often means they were educated instead of trained for a specific position. And they're quick to moan about the waste in spending money to train someone who is just going to leave them. Whether or not it's fair or appropriate, the job applicant is expected to come in already knowing many of the arcane specifics of whatever oddball setup they use.

    --
    Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    1. Re:Shortage of bona fide job offers by MattW · · Score: 2

      Quite common for a good programmer to pick up a programming language quick, then apply for a job that asks for 10 years experience in it

      This is especially true when the language has only been out for 6. I'm sure everyone who has been around long enough remembers jobs that required 10 years of Java in 2001.

  43. America has no shortage of creativity by ben4528 · · Score: 1

    Engineer proffesion is not one of them.

  44. Not economically viable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UX4b_rhT0nU

    This is the main problem with STEM careers. They are not economically viable.

  45. No entry level jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Entry level jobs for STEM were in decline 20 years ago.

    I went to a top engineering & science school, and have watched the careers of me and my friends.

    Most of us have had less than a year or two working in our fields, then got IT or programmer related jobs in the 90s bubble. Some instead became stay-at-home parents.

    One got an actual science job vaguely related to his field, got them to pay for a PHD and made money at it.

    My sister actually managed to work in her field most of her career, but to do it she had to be self-employed about half of it, and willing to work for private consulting firms and the government some of the time.

    Seriously though. The class of 1988 in my college were largely wasted. Maybe 20% actually used their specialized training directly. The rest of us parlayed our critical thinking, analytical training and problem solving skills into completely unrelated careers. (and had to learn people skills on the job, although at least my college was difficult enough that we actually learned teamwork just to graduate)

    There are far, far fewer jobs in STEM open to a graduate with no experience than there was in my day. Companies have outsourced most entry level jobs and aren't willing to provide training or apprenticeship paths to more sophisticated jobs. Then they whine that there isn't anyone to do them.

    1. Re:No entry level jobs by reason · · Score: 1

      The class of 1988 in my college were largely wasted. Maybe 20% actually used their specialized training directly. The rest of us parlayed our critical thinking, analytical training and problem solving skills into completely unrelated careers.

      That doesn't sound like a waste to me. Sounds like a good use of the problem solving skills and analytical training you got from (or demonstrated through) your degrees.

  46. Re:Real Reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You typed this out knowing full well the utter sloth that pervades all of American society."

    Same me, but somewhere else. My response:

    All. ALL? That would include you btw.

    I know there are lazy people. I know there are lazy people in every culture that has every existed and ever will exist on this planet. I also know (*and so do YOU*) that none of these people are lazy because "the governement will take care of me". If you're going to argue with me then do oppose something I did say. Don't put words in my mouth and then try to use those same words to call me a liar.

  47. Engineering is a cost center, not a profit center by kbdd · · Score: 2
    The problem is that most Management/Finance/Marketing types see engineering as a cost center. They know that somehow they need engineers but they do not perceive their services as valuable, just as an expense. Engineers cannot be done soon enough, and on top of that, they seldom meet the budgets and schedules that have been defined by... you guessed it, finance and marketing. Therefore, they represent an expense instead of value to the company.

    Unlike marketing, finance, operations, which is where people can boast of making money or saving the company's money, therefore that is where the bonuses go.

    This is not necessarily the case everywhere, but it is the prevalent attitude.

  48. STEM careers by geohump · · Score: 5, Funny

    To revive STEM graduates here in the USA, Tell American Businesses to stop fucking around and re-hire all the 35 to 55 year old engineers they have been laying off.

    How about we take the CEO of each company that is complaining about not having enough engineering talent, stake them out spread eagled on the ground, and for every engineering position they have open, or for every engineering position they filled with an H1-B hire, we have an un-employed USA engineer who could have filled that position get a pair of steel toed boots and one free shot at that CEO's nuts?

    I realize that the unemployed engineers are getting the bad end of this deal, but it's the best I could do.

    You see, at the end of this the CEO may be terribly injured, but he's still rich. All the unemployed engineers will have is - still nothing. You want people to take the STEM path in college here in the USA? Show them that they will have a career path longer than 13 years!

    1. Re:STEM careers by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      So, geohump, what line of business are you in?

  49. Why so afraid of competition? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you're a master at your, you'll always be able to get one. If not, you'll just have to get used to the idea of earning Chinese wages. After all, if all you can offer is what a Chinese guy can offer, why should the job go to you? Just because you were born in the US? Doesn't sound fair to me.

    1. Re:Why so afraid of competition? by BonThomme · · Score: 1

      Cost of living. 'Getting one' is indeed easy. Getting one that pays sufficiently and offers a viable career, is not.

  50. Two Birds - One Stone by wezelboy · · Score: 1

    The birds - a lack of STEM jobs, low quality STEM education

    The stone- Pay STEM teachers a lot more- on all levels. Heck, pay teachers more period.

    The jobs open up because teaching becomes a viable career for STEM folk. Education quality goes up because better people are attracted to the career.

    I would love to teach, but I can't give up a living wage to get a credential (or a PhD) with little prospect of being able to survive on a teachers salary.

  51. The link between manufacturing and STEM careers by hrvatska · · Score: 4, Informative

    In years gone by, manufacturing plants employed a large proportion of STEM graduates in what was essentially manufacturing engineering. I used to know all sorts of engineers who worked in manufacturing plants that no longer exist in the US. And not just working in the plant, but also for the companies that manufactured the equipment that the manufacturers used to make their products. Most of those jobs went away in the '80s and '90s as manufacturing was off shored. I decided to go into a STEM field because of a low level technician job I as a young person. I went to work in the quality assurance lab of a local chemical manufacturer. In this job I got to work with chemical engineers. These guys were always willing to explain why different testing procedures were done and why we looked for various results. I was also encouraged to go to college and pursue a technical degree. I did. Across the US many communities had manufacturing plants and associated facilities that provided opportunities for young people to become exposed to people in STEM occupations. Not just exposure, but often the companies would pay tuition for technicians who were pursuing BS degrees part time. My first year at university pursuing a chemistry degree was paid for by a small chemical manufacturer. Did they have a job waiting for me? No, but they could write off my tuition because it was in a field related to their business. What kind of jobs are young people get exposed to today? Retail and service. Maybe construction. Manufacturing much less so. Who do they get as career role models? Everything but engineers. They're much more likely to run into some low level manager with a degree in business administration with a concentration in retail sales who is hoping to get their MBA and move up the company ladder. So that's what they do. When the US off shored its manufacturing, it exported more than just low skill jobs. It also exported the path by which many young people entered engineering.

  52. Outsourcing = poverty by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

    It's the money guys. You can try and BS that away but that's the reason.

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  53. mod parent up please! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    please mod parent up please!

  54. Schools increasing cost by 2x inflation rate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Funny that institutions are charging twice the inflation rate. Back when I was in a private university, it was $75 per quarter hour and the instructors were not making much at all. Last I checked, it's nearly $900 a semester hour and the instructors are making out like bandits. It's time to hold the high learning institutions to a higher standard and reduce the cost of attending a university. I know, everyone wants to make huge money, but it's not working out as students have to get larger and larger loans and that degree is now a debt anchor. Shoveling more tax dollars into the system isn't going to work, wages need to be cut back to reality and lower the cost to the students. Oh, and make it economical to hire people again in the US. The brain dead way it is now, there is no way I would start a business up in America, not economically viable to do so anymore because of high taxation (at all levels) and nightmare of regulations that keep getting pumped out by the day.

  55. Re:my liberal arts college had 2 girls for every g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you are old enough to get this joke, your engineering career is coming to a close.

    Anyway yeah... song by Jan and Dean called Surf City. Google it.

  56. The market works by Wansu · · Score: 2

    This is yet another attempt to talk up engineering careers. There ain't many young people buying it because they see what it takes and what they will make. They've been watching large companies laying off engineers by the tens of thousands in mid-career. They know wages have been stagnant for the past 2 decades. They're doing a cost benefit analysis and concluding that there is too much stick and not enough carrot.

    --
    Wansu, th' chinese sailor
  57. Let's face the future, folks. by NikeHerc · · Score: 1

    By the time today's grammar school kids are ready to go into the workforce, there won't be any STEM jobs. Why train for a position for which there will be no jobs?

    --
    Circle the wagons and fire inward. Entropy increases without bounds.
  58. Re:Real Reason by Imrik · · Score: 1

    Not just sports, but entertainment in general.

  59. There's a shortage by rsilvergun · · Score: 2

    of people with Masters in Engineering willing to work for $40k/yr. I guess that qualifies as a shortage. Still, doesn't matter. Engineers are primarily anti-union with libertarian leanings. You know, there's a reason the Lawyers have a Bar you know? Same for the doctor's Union, whoops, I mean AMA. The only way things will get better for US engineers is by banding together as single issue voters. No more giving a flying fsck if some welfare queen is getting by on tax dollars or having an abortion. You've got better things to worry about. If you tax me and extra 10k but my Union and single issue voting nets me another 30k, I'm still ahead you know.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  60. It's been mentioned here before... by epp_b · · Score: 1

    ...but it's worth mentioning again: businesses should operate and be structured similarly to sports teams, where the people directly doing the actual core work are the highest-paid and the deciders of the coaching staff. They may not direct all of the decisions, but have considerably more influence than some dispensable employee in a typical business atmosphere.

    Management and executive positions are just cogs (old, dirty, worn-down ones as it seems most of the time) in the machine, no more important or less replacable than any other, and should be treated that way.

  61. More stuff MIC, less engineers needed in US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the trend tells the story, the more Walmart stuff made in China, the less chances engineer jobs would stay in US.

    1. Re:More stuff MIC, less engineers needed in US by rally2xs · · Score: 1

      Return the 35% of profits skimmed off by corporate income tax (or the money spent on lawyers and accountants guiding your corporation's every step so it is least exposed to the corporate taxes) and then we can compete with the Chinese and bring these jobs back to the USA.

      Think just because they are making a dollar two ninety eight we can't compete with them? Think again - look at how they work. Thousands of people standing at tables assembling everything from I-pads to gym shoes. We here in America don't pay 1000's of people chicken-feed wages, we automate and pay 1 guy or 11 guys (and gals) to do the work of 1000s with the aid of machines. We automate. And we pay them well to run these machines. If we don't, the union will see that we do.

      But we can't do it while the gov't is sucking the lifeblood out of our economy in the form of income taxes. As RR said, if you want less of something, tax it, and income taxes are taxes on prosperity. Soooo... we have less prosperity, probably less than we've ever had. If we want to fix it, we havet to quit taxing income. See how at www.fairtax.org

  62. the more stuff MIC, the less engineers needed here by ben4528 · · Score: 1

    Walmart started the trend of "made in China" , if this trend is not reversed, chances are US gonna lose more engineer jobs.

  63. None of these tech jobs are going to be good by rally2xs · · Score: 1

    until it is once again a good idea to manufacture in the USA. That isn't going to happen when the Feds are taxing corporate income at 35% while the states pile on another 4.5% to equal the 2nd-highest corporate tax rate on the planet. Plain and simple, the taxes have sucked the prosperity out of the USA. It has gone to foreign shores, and will not return until we learn to zeroize the income taxes, all of them, and tax something else. IOW, we should go to a consumption tax, and free our businesses to compete internationally again. Read about it at www.fairtax.org.

    1. Re:None of these tech jobs are going to be good by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Oh an inherently regressive consumption tax, that's a great idea. You know just making middle & lower class Americans poorer than the Chinese through taxation won't bring the jobs back.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    2. Re:None of these tech jobs are going to be good by rally2xs · · Score: 1

      This particular consumption tax is PROgressive, not regressive. Poor people don't pay a penny of it, and the rich... well, its almost unfair to the rich. For example, John Kerry and his wife made about $10M, and paid about $1.75M in income taxes, in recent disclosures. However, that $70M yacht they own would have been taxed at $21M at purchase, or about 12 years worth of their income tax . If they buy a bauble like that every 12 years or so, it'd equal their income tax bite, but I'm betting they don't string out their trinkets to that extent.

  64. Re:Real Reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You think Section 8 housing and food stamps mean just as good quality of life?

  65. because by nimbius · · Score: 1

    endless education debt, dead end careers, layoffs, outsourcing, and employers with unatainable qualifications that rarely hire qualified expensive american employees couldnt possibly be the problem

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  66. Re:Real Reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not just STEM affected by this. Companies in manufacturing /tech routinely advertised for sales reps with very specific tech vertical experience who had an established book of business, ie. only those reps who had worked for direct competitors. In other words, "hey we're going to use you for your relationships you took years to build" - because contrary to the lab tech's assumptions, iPads and PLCs don't sell themselves no matter how well they're made. Why bother developing ie. business development when you can just steal reps from the competition, back when there were competitors worth stealing employees from?
    It takes someone skilled at the psychological bullshit reasons why people buy things to get them to buy, and/or finance people to figure out how many of those fuckers have to buy every month, every quarter without end, adding new fucking customers to infinity, in order to keep paying the engineers and support staff.
    But in engineer fantasy land, there is some omnipotent force that PeanutBB can call on to "make" engineering jobs "worthy" of a "quality" person's time yet a job without risk. News flash: nothing gets designed/ sold / built without huge risk. I see the totalitarian fantasy of leftist control of the "knowledge class" over the eeeeevil capitalist still thrives here. (Hint: Solyndra)

  67. Pay them to shill for corporations instead! by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    Who needs STEM? We can make our livings promoting corporate agendas by rephrasing talking points to every online forum as well as dumb down any discussion to lower the chances people figure out what is really going on.

    1. Re:Pay them to shill for corporations instead! by rally2xs · · Score: 1

      For corporations? How about "for the American people"? Having prosperous corporations would make a lot of prosperous employees.

    2. Re:Pay them to shill for corporations instead! by bussdriver · · Score: 1

      simpleton.

    3. Re:Pay them to shill for corporations instead! by rally2xs · · Score: 1

      Recall the Terminator's reply to the landlord that was pounding on the door when he was trying to fix his eye...

  68. Simple by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Instead of giving 700 billion to keep bank and finance types from going bankrupt and losing their jobs ( and creating a huge incentive to enter those fields), let them go belly up.

    Then those careers will not attract the smart people.

    For bonus points, have pure engineering and science programs to the tune of 100 billion per year.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  69. Jobs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The career path for these occupations is bad and getting worse. Just as Dell outsourced to ASUSTek till AsusTek basically started building their own boxes. You've probably seen this before: I'll recap. Dell started using ASUSTek for small boards. ASUS told them they could do more, so Dell tried giving them more complicated circuit boards. Then they started small motherboards. Then bigger motherboards, then the supply chain went, and finally engineering. As ASUS did more, their own expertise improved. In the process, Dell exported manufacturing and engineering for their entire line. Now Dell isn't alone. Others have done this too. Engineering? In US? Oh, just for training the overseas people, before shuttering the local office/plant for good. And people want more engineers? Who are those people, and why do they want them?

  70. Hah by FrootLoops · · Score: 1

    As a gay mathematician,

    they may even jump to moral decay as a causative agent

    made me laugh. It would have been nice if they cited a source actually saying something so ridiculous.

  71. no shortage of engineers by buybuydandavis · · Score: 2

    I went to an Ivy League school in electrical engineering. Of the people I kept in touch with, no one lasted more than 5 years with a career in engineering. The smarter ones bailed for business quicker, dumb ones like me got a PhD in engineering trying to improve my engineering opportunities, but in the end, we all moved to business because the opportunities were better.

    1. Re:no shortage of engineers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and some of us are leaving to go do blue collar work for less pay, but better job security and quality of life. In fact having an Ivy league degree in Engineering and actually doing real work more in line with my degree (even if only at a technician level) is far more fufilling than designing algos for retards.

  72. Stagnation begats stagnations by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 2

    By the way my pay has gone up. It's about 2.3 times larger than in 2001, though it requires moving around the country (no settling-down and raising a family). I'm surprised to hear people say their pay has stagnated

    It has stagnated. After about 10 years of experience, a typical engineer's pay is frozen

    If your income has stagnated after 10 years of experience, the root cause is that you have stagnated your own career

    In Engineering, as well as in Computing (and most other fields of Science) every single day there are new developments, new things, new discoveries

    If one works in 2012 but still having the knowledge and skill-set of 2002, please tell us how you expect others to pay you salary increases?

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    1. Re:Stagnation begats stagnations by Laur · · Score: 2

      If your income has stagnated after 10 years of experience, the root cause is that you have stagnated your own career

      I'll try to explain what I think the grandparent means. Say I am a mechanical or electrical engineer at a large company. Here are the requirements for promotion:

      Level 1: Starting (college grad)
      Level 2: Minimum 2 years experience.
      Level 3: Minimum 5 years experience.
      Level 4: Minimum 9 years experience.
      Level 5: Minimum 14 years experience. Also needs a "business case" to justify promotion. These are typically technical lead positions, but are not management.

      The numbers above are real numbers from a large US company. As you can see, once you've reached Level 4 you've reached the end of your career advancement if you want to stay a grunt, and you can easily get there in 10 years from college. Many Engineers stay at this level for the rest of their career. Level 5 is doable if you don't mind being a lead, but still that's only 14 years in and then you truly have reached the end of your career advancement. Beyond that, the only options for advancement are:

      * Go into management.
      * Company hop to increase your salary.

      This has nothing to do with whether or not you keep your skill set up to date. If you do that you may get higher yearly merit salary increases (which hopefully exceed inflation), but no more promotions. The salary grades just don't exist.

      --
      When you lose something irreplaceable, you don't mourn for the thing you lost, you mourn for yourself. - Harpo Marx
    2. Re:Stagnation begats stagnations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how naive of you, lol,

  73. Work is NOT a dating agency!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you don't have the social skills to meet girls elsewhere, it would be disastrous to bring your relationships to work. Work on those skills and find another avenue to meet women. If the relationship fails, you're stuck seeing that person 8+ hours a day 5 or 6 days a week. If it ends badly being around them can become miserable!!!

    Work is for working. I've never worked ANYWHERE where more than 5-10% of the people were part of a couple with their spouse working at the same place, let alone on the same team. Working with someone can be fantastic but has it's own strains on a romantic relationship. Moving teams or companies takes that factor away.

    1. Re:Work is NOT a dating agency!!! by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Where else do you meet girls? In my case, it was match.com, but considering the experiences I had there, I count myself lucky and wouldn't recommend it as a general answer to this question. For most people, the answer seems to be "go get plastered in a bar and meet women there". Yeah, that sounds just great. For other people, it seems to be "meet them through family members", but a common theme through these threads, and something that was definitely true for me, is that you have to move to a different geographic area to be successful in a profession, which means you're probably not going to be living anywhere near where your family members live if you want to pursue a STEM career (unless your family just happens to live in the Bay Area, for instance).

      I've never worked ANYWHERE where more than 5-10% of the people were part of a couple with their spouse working at the same place

      So did you ask them where they did meet their spouses? I'll bet that, for many, it was "while in college". Which is actually a very good place to meet girls. The problem is if you graduate college and enter the workforce without having found a spouse (maybe you were too busy with those engineering classes), or if you graduate with a girlfriend, but after you enter the workforce you end up breaking up, and now you're no longer in the college atmosphere surrounded by single girls but instead in some city working at MegaCo and surrounded by married people.

    2. Re:Work is NOT a dating agency!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody said I'm trying to date my immediate coworkers. If you follow my argument, I just want to have a more 50/50 network from which to make true, good friends (not all males) and from which to network. Just as males more naturally have more male friends, so will females. That is all.

    3. Re:Work is NOT a dating agency!!! by Unsichtbarer_Mensch · · Score: 1

      ... you're no longer in the college atmosphere surrounded by single girls but instead ...

      Easy there tiger...please remember that most engineering universities are extremely male-dominated, campus-wide. The problem becomes even worse if the institution is the only university in a small to medium sized city and has attracted a truckload of tech companies around it as well. So essentially from the moment you enter such a place you are pretty much toast unless you invest inordinate amounts of energy into competing with the other guys over the few single girls on the campus or unless you have been blessed with an extensive social network in a different city or in a different university than your own - with all the logistical problems this might entail. And no , 'dance classes' and other activities that 'attract women' in a place with skewed demographics don't help. Heck in my university you can't sign up at a dance class unless you bring your own (female) partner due to the catastrophic oversupply of guys.

      --
      Du kan glomma dina ensama stunder, du kan lita paa teknikens under - Wilmer X
    4. Re:Work is NOT a dating agency!!! by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I don't know what kind of university you went to, but I went to a large state university that was highly ranked in engineering (for a public state U), but even so, engineering was far from the only department on campus with 25-30k students. There were still all the other departments: liberal arts, a highly ranked business school, agriculture/veterinary (it was a land-grant U), architecture, etc. There were tons of women there, just not so many in the engineering college, and almost none in the EE school. So if you were walking around the engineering buildings, you wouldn't see that many women, but if you were walking around the other buildings, or the dorms, there were tons of them. It was the same at the other big state U I attended for a couple years before transferring to the better-ranked one.

      If your "university" is dominated by an engineering school (which kinda makes it not a real university--the word itself means that it's an institution that teaches everything, not just one narrow subject, and normal universities have many different colleges), then obviously your experience will be rather different. I wouldn't expect to have very good odds meeting women at MIT, but that's not exactly a typical engineering school, and not really a university anyway.

  74. Lack of motivation by andyteleco · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I studied Telecommunication Engineering in Spain. It's one of the toughest degrees in the country, with an average time of just under 8 years to complete the courses (officially it's 5 years + 1 year for the Diploma Thesis).

    When I started my studies, the entry requirements were pretty high. You needed to bring very good grades from high school to get accepted, and lots of students applied lured by good job perspectives. Of course, a great number of the ones who got accepted fell out in the first years because they couldn't cope or simply because they realized they didn't like what they were doing, but the ones who finished did get pretty good jobs for local standards.

    However, in the last 15 years everything has turned upside down. Nowadays, an engineer barely makes more than a policeman or a regular public servant for example, funding for R&D (the thing which people are willing to do without thinking so much about the money) is being cut by every government that comes and young people simply don't see any benefit in spending so many years at University, specially when it's becoming more and more expensive to study and people have less and less money.

    In the last course, an old colleague who now works as an associate professor told me that only 25% of the places offered in our course were filled, so now virtually anyone who applies gets accepted. And a great number of the engineers who study in Spanish universities emigrate to other countries (now especially to Germany) desperate to get a decent job.

    I don't know it this has anything to do with what is happening in the US but I do know in other European countries the situation is similar. Right now, there are still a few good havens for engineers in Northern Europe (Germany, Holland, Scandinavian countries), but who knows what will happen in another 15 years.

    1. Re:Lack of motivation by reason · · Score: 1

      Funny you should mention that. I'm in Australia. I spent today in a planning meeting, where we were told that it's a GREAT time for us to recruit senior scientists from Spain, North America and the UK, but not the rest of Europe, since most of the rest of Europe has insulated its research spending somewhat from current economic woes.

    2. Re:Lack of motivation by andyteleco · · Score: 0

      Yes, I would maybe extend the situation to other Southern countries like Italy, Portugal or Greece, where there are also plenty of well-prepared people who are willing to go abroad for a good job.

  75. Intelligent people won't work for peanuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is not a shortage of engineers, it is a shortage of engineers who are willing to work for a pathetic wage.
    Since engineers are generally intelligent people, they will just go and work elsewhere, unless compensated sufficiently.

  76. you got it by nidaye · · Score: 0

    You could be the focus among the people; you could be the one who never ordinary. replica Hermes is looking for its host, the highest quality, the best color and the best service is what we can provide to you. You deserve to have one.

  77. Nationalism? A two way street. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stop being ignorant enough to believe this is a one way street, where only the U.S. is practicing what is called, in some circles, "protectionism". The simple fact is that if you're the only one in the ecosystem who wholly embraces a "free and open market", you're whoring yourself out for quarterly earnings results. Guess what? The market is neither free nor open.

    Wholly exporting your ability to both innovate and produce does nothing but bind your success to an external factor which can disappear at a moment's notice. And when it does, where are you? Fucked.

    American labor still has meaning, it drives our work ethic and is whole and part of our national identity and prosperity (see "The American Dream"). The idea of devaluing that based on the idea of globalization and MBA-isms is short sighted and ignorant. This is not jingoism either, it's inherit in every culture / national identity. You'll find it everywhere.

    Historically, labor does go through movements: agriculture, the industrial revolution, technology, knowledge work, with each successive generation replacing the last as the "driving force". The question is, what comes after knowlege-based work? The better question is, how sustainable is that transition to the "next thing" when a large % of the population can't make the jump? Will the country crash, burn and collapse?

    Ignoring these questions in the name of "all nationalism is stupid" is, well, cutting off your nose to spite your face.

  78. informal poll by BonThomme · · Score: 1

    Everyone making the same (or less) than they were making 13 years ago, raise your hand.

  79. Yes by shiftless · · Score: 1

    Bro--listen to me. Ignore the naysayers. Trust your instincts. If it looks good to you....DO it, and don't look back. If it doesn't......be patient keep waiting for the right opportunity. You are in no way shape form or fashion "naive." You are on the road to success.

  80. Poor strategy by shiftless · · Score: 1

    And you would soon go out of business due to the misery and low morale created in your company, leading to shit products, pissed off customers, and slumping sales.

    Business doesn't work exactly like you seem to think it does.

  81. Shortage?!?! Hahahahaha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a PhD in physics and make my living doing what I taught myself how to do on the side - program... It is because of that reason that I direct anyone willing to listen not to waste their time in science or engineering since they import people from overseas, then flush them when they get a green-card.

    Wanna see why no one is going into those careers? Look at where the people who got degrees in those areas are today. I dare say that virtually none of them are actually using their degree in any meaningful way - if they are in the US. If they returned to their native country, they are probably involved in various areas of research, using their degrees.

  82. The powers that be are massively anti-worker by jfern · · Score: 1

    For example, when we were losing 500,000 per month during this recession (October 2008), Meg Whitman calls for 500,000 new H1Bs a year (they are typically for several years, so this would mean millions of new H1Bs). Instead of being ostracized for being so blatently anti-worker, the California Republican party actually nominated her for governor in 2010, along with Carly offshore Fiornia for Senator.

  83. The Problem is Racism. Drugs are the Answer! by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    In the story Study Finds Heart Disease Drug Combats Racism CBS provides us with the answer:

    Put heart disease drugs in the water supply so we can combat the racism of these envious disgruntled aging white males who are opposed to importing a substantial portion of the population of Asia to the US.

    Its almost as though they think the US is entitled to territory or some Holocaust-spawning idea like that.

  84. Shouldn't wages be going up in other careers? by twoallbeefpatties · · Score: 1

    Last year I became a truck driver when I needed a career change. I'm told that the industry has a dearth of over-the-road (OTR) truck drivers. Most guys don't want to spend their entire day on the road, not getting home every night (or even every week), not seeing their families or having a social life. OTR is the position that newbies get dumped into, it's just what they have to take to get a foothold into the profession, but a lot of them end up pulling regional or local work as soon as they can get a year's experience under their belts.

    Having said all of that, I've also read trucker forums where some guys say they wish new OTR drivers would stop joining the profession, because then maybe the pay would finally go up. The average OTR company driver is making $40k-$50k depending on their experience levels, and what's more, it's entirely dependent on how much work you get since you're usually paid by the mile rather than hourly or salary. You run all day and don't get home much, but you have to fight for that middle-class salary.

    This is something that I've heard across various professions, that wages are just not going up even when there's demand. I suspect the "real problem" here is actually not that companies want to secretly give all the jobs to foreigners. I think the problem is that the American economy no longer correctly pays for employment in accordance with demand. As other people have said about the way managers get paid more, we have some long-ingrained ideas about who is supposed to get paid what in this country, and it's hard as fuck-all to get anyone to change their minds on that, even when they aren't attracting anyone at that price.

    --
    Libertarians somehow believe that private businesses should be stronger than governments but weaker than individuals.
  85. Re:The Problem is Racism. Drugs are the Answer! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently there are those whose plaques on the wall have blinded them to the fact that non-white xenophobia is based on resentment over what the West has and white xenophobia is based on a desire to protect that which one has. Resentment is OK; protection is not.

  86. it will create by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    more unemployed engineers

  87. Re:Real Reason by Dabido · · Score: 1

    The earth sucks!

    --
    Sure enough, the cow costume was hanging up next to the superhero outfit and sailors uniform. (S,Spud)