Show me another major in which you graduate college knowing essentially three major fields of engineering (structural, mechanical, and electrical) and have to do a thesis just to get an undergraduate degree.
I've spent a great deal of time on this website defending the AE degree from assaults by a particular *****. But this statement is absurd. AE majors may know the very basics of these three disciplines, but they certainly do not have the in depth specific knowledge that people with these degrees possess. I'm sure it's a rigorous discipline that has its own requirements and knowledge base, but it is not the same as earning all three degrees in EE, CE, and ME. You could use a little humility yourself IMO.
I don't care how "strick" the admission process is.
I never said it's the same as earning all three degrees, and it is much more than just basic knowledge of each topic. After 3 years studying each topic and taking advanced classes in all of them I think it's a very accurate statement that you graduate college knowing three major fields, maybe not as in depth as someone who focused solely on one topic (besides of course the topic you focus on), but still enough that you have more than just a basic understanding. Also keep in mind that after the first three years you have two years of classes solely in one of them, so you have a very in depth knowledge of a certain engineering and a very good understanding of two others.
Well, I don't know where you went to school, but I looked up the requirements for Cal Poly SLO and I assume they're typical.
http://www.catalog.calpoly.edu/2009pubcat/...ept/arce_bs.pdf
They require precisely one course in EE - basic lower division circuit theory.
By those standards you could say I know civil engineering because I took one lower division course in statics and dynamics as part of a breadth requirement. I'd say unless you have the equivalent of a minor in something you only have a basic knowledge of it. Even with a minor your knowledge is not much more than basic. I got within about a semester from a degree in biophysics but I don't claim to know physics anywhere near like a real physicist.
If your school was vastly different, let me know the name of it and I'll check it out.
That is actually completely different than the AE programs I've seen. That program deals a lot more with simply structures and architecture rather than all the building components that other AE programs focus on. Although I do think you're completely missing my point in that I'm not saying that I know as much as the electrical guys I work with, but I have done electrical system design before and I have more than just a basic understanding of the systems, but I would never say I'm an electrical engineer. On the other hand though I went the structural option and I know just as much as the civils I work with (for building design at least) since we all take the same building structures classes, and actually even more than some civil programs. None of the civils I work with ever took classes on connections or advanced seismic design or finite element analysis, and granted every college is different so I only know how my program stacks up to some of my co-workers programs so there could easily be civil programs out there that do have those classes.
I guess the big point here is that people really shouldn't talk about things they know nothing about. Unless you've been through the program you have no idea what's involved with it. It's very frustrating when people say that it's not real engineering when in fact I went through all the exact same building structures classes as a civil would have at my college. The difference between my degree and a civil degree at my college is instead of taking classes on transportation or water resources or any of the other civil disciplines, I took classes on electrical and mechanical engineering and construction management. I kind of feel that if they started calling it Building Engineering rather than Architectural engineering people would take it more seriously. Those silly architects making life difficult yet again!
Anyone who thinks that the Arch Eng degree doesn't compare to traditional engineering degrees is an uneducated moron who needs to do a little homework before they open their mouths. When I was at Penn State, the AEs used to disregard engineering majors like Civil or straight Mechanical as lesser degrees as the work load was so much simpler and straight forward. I agree also with the person who stated that a great many people who start AE end up in Civil or some other field because they could not maintain the grades or handle the work load. I had quite a few friends go that route. Not sure if all AE programs are like this, but Penn State is an excellent engineering school and the major has done me countless favors. The MD PE board even granted me a full year of work experience for the degree, so I got my PEness a whole year early.
Additionally, I would NOT agree that you essentially leave knowing three major fields, but that could be because of how Penn State structured their program (I did take QUITE a few more electrical courses than the one class someone spoke to above). There you take 2.5ish years of a broad spectrum of courses from the four major fields of building construction: mechanical, electrical, structural, and construction management. The next 2.5 ish years are mostly specific to one of those disciplines (yes it's a 5 year program - too much to cover in 4 years like most engineering majors) and you end up having to prepare a major thesis in the 5th year just to get the Bachelors Degree. However, as the major is designed to focus on the building industry, that assumes you will be looking for a job in that industry after college. My focus was mechanical, and I came out of college a good two years ahead of regular mechanical engineers trying to get work IN THIS PARTICULAR FIELD. ME's, EE'S, etc. with no architectural background need training following college to get them up to speed with all the specifics of this industry (I hope no one argues this point as it will make them sound idiotic), and coming out of the AE field also meant I was as proficient at CAD and Revit as most CAD techs in the industry. Most of the straight ME's we've hired have never even seen these programs before, or used a load analysis program, or even sized ductwork or piping, basic things that need to be taught while the company loses money in the training. And while you will not know everything about the other building fields, you will remember enough from your basic classes in the other fields to allow you to speak intelligently to engineers in those other disciplines. A straight ME entering the building industry probably wouldn't know an I-beam from his own ***, let alone the basics of stress/strain relationships of structural building elements, wind impacts, snow loading, etc.
I'm not bashing other engineering degrees, and I wouldn't expect to be able to take this AE degree and have it open any doors for me mechanically outside of the building industry. But as I said above, IN THE BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY, having a degree in AE is MUCH more valueable than a straight ME degree, EE degree, etc. I am moving up in my firm far faster than the few straight ME's that have been hired in the past few years, and I am getting compensated well (well above the salary average with only 3.5 years work experience). Any engineer who thinks the work wasn't put in to get an AE degree or that the dergee holds no merit is probably an engineer who is still sitting in a small cube making less than average wages. Know what you're talking about before you speak out; the same lack of understanding and bias is probably what's holding you back at your own job.
Also, as a last thought, learning to write basic english using complete sentences, correct sentence structure, accurate punctuation, correctly spelled words, and well thought out concepts will do wonders. As an engineer, if you are going to bash someone else's degree, at least write as though you have more than a 7th grade level of education.