monique
Mechanical
- Nov 21, 2002
- 2
I am a mechanical engineer working for a medium-sized construction company performing quality control at the construction site in the summer and drafting/material acquisition in the winter. I have been out of school a little over two years. I took a job in construction right out of school because I thought it would be good experience for design. There always seems to be a riff between the designers/engineers and the people who construct what was designed. I wanted to get a better hold on what problems and solutions occurred with a design in the field.
This job was pretty fun for the first year, I was learning so much, and everything was new. But, the problem now is that it seems to have kind of stagnated. I feel like I am just pushing paper for the Corps of Engineers, sort of like a glorified secretary. I have rethought the idea of working for a design firm, but not sure if that's the right path anymore.
There are some things that I really like about working construction:
-no cubicles (I'm out in an office trailer all summer, mostly out on the jobsite)
-good pay (payed overtime all summer, 40 hour weeks in the winter)
-interaction with all kinds of people (Gov't workers, subcontractors, laborers, plumbers, carpenters, electricians, etc)
But, there seems to be more downsides:
-working overtime all summer
-no payed vacation (everyone's hourly with no payed time off)
-working with mostly non-engineers (lots of cheesy engineering jokes)
-working with Gov't employees who stick to the book even if it makes no sense,
-working for a small, family run company (nepotism runs rampant)
-and really no "engineering" per say, I just check that the crew has followed other engineer’s designs
I would definitely be willing to take a pay cut if I could find something interesting/creative/challenging to do. I expect that every job will have its downsides and slow periods, but I wonder if anyone has any advice on places to look in Alaska for jobs, or even a career path, that might have more of the good qualities I described above than the negatives. I would love to go into manufacturing but, unfortunately, Alaska is not the right place and I'm not quite ready to relocate. Any suggestions/questions would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you.
This job was pretty fun for the first year, I was learning so much, and everything was new. But, the problem now is that it seems to have kind of stagnated. I feel like I am just pushing paper for the Corps of Engineers, sort of like a glorified secretary. I have rethought the idea of working for a design firm, but not sure if that's the right path anymore.
There are some things that I really like about working construction:
-no cubicles (I'm out in an office trailer all summer, mostly out on the jobsite)
-good pay (payed overtime all summer, 40 hour weeks in the winter)
-interaction with all kinds of people (Gov't workers, subcontractors, laborers, plumbers, carpenters, electricians, etc)
But, there seems to be more downsides:
-working overtime all summer
-no payed vacation (everyone's hourly with no payed time off)
-working with mostly non-engineers (lots of cheesy engineering jokes)
-working with Gov't employees who stick to the book even if it makes no sense,
-working for a small, family run company (nepotism runs rampant)
-and really no "engineering" per say, I just check that the crew has followed other engineer’s designs
I would definitely be willing to take a pay cut if I could find something interesting/creative/challenging to do. I expect that every job will have its downsides and slow periods, but I wonder if anyone has any advice on places to look in Alaska for jobs, or even a career path, that might have more of the good qualities I described above than the negatives. I would love to go into manufacturing but, unfortunately, Alaska is not the right place and I'm not quite ready to relocate. Any suggestions/questions would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you.