Electrical and electrotechnical firms express concern over schools’ careers advice
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Discuss Survey: Majority of schools 'don't understand' apprenticeships in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
Electrical and electrotechnical firms express concern over schools’ careers advice
Read the full news article
Probably not a bad suggestion. There is general ignorance about the electrical field - or engineering in general.Perhaps the powers that be for example the IET, NICEIC etc could come up with a plan to visit Schools, Academies etc to talk to the students that realistically don't have a hope of getting into Uni, or would rather take up a trade, I would be up for that with years of exerience in the Trade.
going into electrical engineering sounds like a very interesting field to go into but at the same time there is an awful lot of responsibilityProbably not a bad suggestion. There is general ignorance about the electrical field - or engineering in general.
Tell someone that you're an electrical engineer and they quite likely imagine that you fix washing machines.
thats true, i started to do A-levels and hated it.The problem with schools is they condition everyone in to thinking that A-levels and then university are the only option. From experience it was only the kids who may not have done so well who received advice on apprenticeships etc.
thats true, i started to do A-levels and hated it.
the subjects i did i thought wouldn't be too bad but they were incredably boring.
at least the buisness studies one was interesting but that might have been because i didnt know anything about it before i started it
true, absolutely worthless when setting up a buisness at least at as level, i didnt bother going back for the next year as i had no intention by that point of going to uniInteresting you say that! I did business studies and although I found it interesting I didn't find it practical at all. There was nothing channeled towards setting up your own business. Maybe I should have done a BTEC. I avoided uni as I would've only gone for all the wrong reasons:54:
Yes, it does I suppose. I was mainly involved with variable speed drives - some very large ones included. Getting it wrong of a 6,000kW drive just isn't an option.going into electrical engineering sounds like a very interesting field to go into but at the same time there is an awful lot of responsibility
to be honest i got interested in electronics because stepdad was an avionics technician in the raf and one of my teachers was a radar technitian etcYes, it does I suppose. I was mainly involved with variable speed drives - some very large ones included. Getting it wrong of a 6,000kW drive just isn't an option.
I don't know what got me interested in that field. It certainly wasn't any careers advice from school. I suspect that none of the teachers had the slightest idea about it. And careers advisers were conspicuous by their absence.
to be honest i got interested in electronics because stepdad was an avionics technician in the raf and one of my teachers was a radar technitian etc
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