guitarjamman
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2011
- Messages
- 82
- Reaction score
- 9
I have a gripe with current college curriculums and what is required to earn a degree. It seems no school requires a class in AutoCAD drafting specific to the major, they only offer a basic elective that shows how to draw a line inside of a circle. When my company tries to hire a new employee, none of the recent graduates know how to draft; they put down some autocad experience on the resume but have no idea where to even begin when it comes to using the major features we use day after day. I harldy call "knowing how to make a rectangle and hatching it" experience.
Now I know that we are looking for an entry level civil engineer and not a draftsman, but with technology these days, I honestly feel like using pencil and paper to design something does not cut it anymore. I would rather play with lines in AutoCAD to get my grading to work than to try and draw pencil lines and erase, try again, crumple paper and print new sheet, erase, etc....Am I being absurd in asking schools to train engineers how to use the tools of the trade? With all the money that we pay to "educate" ourselves, the least the overpaid teachers could do is offer a degree specific course in how to hit the ground running when hired.
/RANT
Now I know that we are looking for an entry level civil engineer and not a draftsman, but with technology these days, I honestly feel like using pencil and paper to design something does not cut it anymore. I would rather play with lines in AutoCAD to get my grading to work than to try and draw pencil lines and erase, try again, crumple paper and print new sheet, erase, etc....Am I being absurd in asking schools to train engineers how to use the tools of the trade? With all the money that we pay to "educate" ourselves, the least the overpaid teachers could do is offer a degree specific course in how to hit the ground running when hired.
/RANT