LearnerN
Civil/Environmental
- Sep 9, 2010
- 102
Question: are engineers expected to know everything, or do they many times have to just figure it out??
Let me provide some background to my question so you can see where I'm coming from, as this is partly a personal question. I am the only civil engineer working in a pipeline engineering company, and I mostly do pipeline design. (I have about 7 years of engineering work experience in a variety of engineering settings.) In previous jobs, there've always been engineers with more experience than me in any of the work I was doing. But in my current job, I'm used every so often to do some basic civil engineering design for things I've never actually designed before. In my job, I don't have any older more experienced civil engineers to learn from when I'm doing something new in civil engineering. So often I take the civil engineering knowledge I have from school and passing the civil PE...ask plenty of questions at work...see if I can find some industry resource or design guide, and then do the design to the best of my ability.
Is this very typical of how some engineers do things in their jobs? I think I've always kind-of felt this expectation as an engineer that I'm expected to know everything, but the more experience I get in various types of design, the more I think that very often the engineer's role is to do their best to figure out how to do a design or solve some engineering problem. (Hearing from others on this topic would help me feel a little more at peace in better understanding realistic expectations for an engineer. This is something I've wondered about ever since I graduated from college, but just never thought to ask.) Thank you!
Let me provide some background to my question so you can see where I'm coming from, as this is partly a personal question. I am the only civil engineer working in a pipeline engineering company, and I mostly do pipeline design. (I have about 7 years of engineering work experience in a variety of engineering settings.) In previous jobs, there've always been engineers with more experience than me in any of the work I was doing. But in my current job, I'm used every so often to do some basic civil engineering design for things I've never actually designed before. In my job, I don't have any older more experienced civil engineers to learn from when I'm doing something new in civil engineering. So often I take the civil engineering knowledge I have from school and passing the civil PE...ask plenty of questions at work...see if I can find some industry resource or design guide, and then do the design to the best of my ability.
Is this very typical of how some engineers do things in their jobs? I think I've always kind-of felt this expectation as an engineer that I'm expected to know everything, but the more experience I get in various types of design, the more I think that very often the engineer's role is to do their best to figure out how to do a design or solve some engineering problem. (Hearing from others on this topic would help me feel a little more at peace in better understanding realistic expectations for an engineer. This is something I've wondered about ever since I graduated from college, but just never thought to ask.) Thank you!