P.E. Past, Present, & Future?
It was not long ago when anyone with a non-engineering degree could obtain a P.E. that was based on subjective pass-fail criteria and, as a result, the profession today has an inappropriate amount of P.Es with unqualified credentials.
Now, we have improved licensing requirements, but we have peripheral P.E. designations such as Environmental, Metallurgical, Mining & Mineral, Naval Architecture & Marine, Nuclear, & Petroleum P.E. designation. All of these were, not long ago, under the Mechanical Engineering umbrella.
And, omg, we now have an Industrial Engineering (Professors & Students referred that discipline as Imaginary Engineering) P.E. And another omg, Agricultural P.E.
Where are we going???
I remember Industrial Engineering students struggling with Thermodynamics; moreover, Civil Engineers took courses such as Mechanics of Materials and Mechanical Behavior of Materials as seniors, but in ME, we took those courses in our freshman & sophomore years.
In some ways the P.E designation has improved, but in others, I believe it is increasingly becoming a “so-what” designation.
Arguments please.
It was not long ago when anyone with a non-engineering degree could obtain a P.E. that was based on subjective pass-fail criteria and, as a result, the profession today has an inappropriate amount of P.Es with unqualified credentials.
Now, we have improved licensing requirements, but we have peripheral P.E. designations such as Environmental, Metallurgical, Mining & Mineral, Naval Architecture & Marine, Nuclear, & Petroleum P.E. designation. All of these were, not long ago, under the Mechanical Engineering umbrella.
And, omg, we now have an Industrial Engineering (Professors & Students referred that discipline as Imaginary Engineering) P.E. And another omg, Agricultural P.E.
Where are we going???
I remember Industrial Engineering students struggling with Thermodynamics; moreover, Civil Engineers took courses such as Mechanics of Materials and Mechanical Behavior of Materials as seniors, but in ME, we took those courses in our freshman & sophomore years.
In some ways the P.E designation has improved, but in others, I believe it is increasingly becoming a “so-what” designation.
Arguments please.
Last edited by a moderator: