davab
Structural
- Sep 22, 2012
- 35
Hello everyone,
I want to get some perspective in when (around what age?) and how long it took for you to get your PE license. Is it always good to get PE license as quickly as possible? Do you need some balance between a work experience and PE license? Obviously, with 6 year requirement to be qualified as PE in California, one would expect to have at least 2 years of engineering experience. However, there seem to be people with Bachelor and Masters degree in civil/structural engineering who can replace up to 5 years out of 6 required years with just school alone. That would leave them with one more year of work experience in engineering firm and they should be qualified to be PE.
To me, getting PE as quickly as possible seems like a good thing. What do you guys think?
Someone like I described above should have his/her PE license around age of 25-27. Too early?
I want to get some perspective in when (around what age?) and how long it took for you to get your PE license. Is it always good to get PE license as quickly as possible? Do you need some balance between a work experience and PE license? Obviously, with 6 year requirement to be qualified as PE in California, one would expect to have at least 2 years of engineering experience. However, there seem to be people with Bachelor and Masters degree in civil/structural engineering who can replace up to 5 years out of 6 required years with just school alone. That would leave them with one more year of work experience in engineering firm and they should be qualified to be PE.
To me, getting PE as quickly as possible seems like a good thing. What do you guys think?
Someone like I described above should have his/her PE license around age of 25-27. Too early?