Engineer By Design
  • Archives
  • August26th

    I remember during high school and college, I always despised the first day of class. Being a high school freshman, I thought of the next eight years of my life as the same repetitive process over and over: go to class, do homework, take tests, do well, don’t fail. It also further became an annoyance going into college doing my undergraduate work because then I encountered professors who actually intentionally tried to fail their students, admittedly doing so to keep the best and brightest students in the end.

    Left and right, I was told that life becomes so much better once you start working; that it’d be simply work your shift and come home with nothing to worry about.

    A couple months into when I entered the workforce, my attitude towards school changed. I actually missed it. August and January would fly by and it seemed empty without paying the exorbitant amount for textbooks and preparing for a nonexistent school year.

    The shift in mindset
    In the working world, the only education that you have for you is the education that only life could give you. (Otherwise known as experience.) When you’re out there, it’s already assumed that you’ve mastered the tools that you need to know. And as for the notion of “once you come home from work you have nothing to worry about”, it’s not true! Several times after I came home from work I would find myself complaining about my workday, whether it be to my family, cat or boyfriend!

    In school, your job as a student is simple and straightforward — learn. School is very much a luxury where you can learn practically anything you want.  If you want to learn about classical mechanics, there’s a class on that. Advanced modulation and coding? There’s a class on that. Even though there are a lot of jokes about underwater basket weaving, there’s a class on that. Or at least, there was a class on that.

    There are so many resources available to you to at school (i.e., the library, professors, lab equipment, classmates, etc) that there’s really no reason to outright fail, unless you just lack the motivation. School  You don’t have to worry about furloughs or layoffs … in the end, you have nothing to worry about except yourself.

    My new job – being a student
    I’m glad that I’m back at school. Even though the classification of “student” can resonate to me as “n00b”, I’m happy that I have to opportunity to expand my skill set in computer science from aerospace engineering. Though in a way, being in the workforce has corrupted my mindset, where …

    • “Classes/Lab” = 1 hour 15 minute meetings to discuss [subject] with [professor]
    • “Homework” = personal project/task to prep for meeting
    • “Tests” = gate review; product testing

    My same goal from being an employee also carries over to being a student. That is, be a master of the skills needed to complete my tasks, complete tasks in a timely manner, and always extend a hand to people who need help.

    Put simply, “Be absolutely, totally awesome.”

  • August25th

    I got to class a bit early today and sat there reviewing my notes while I was overhearing a group of undergraduate students talking about internships that they landed for next summer.

    “[Company Name] is coming to campus soon but thank God I don’t need to worry about it! If your dad wasn’t the hiring manager, I wouldn’t have gotten that internship for next summer!”

    I just happen to know [Company Name], and that [Company Name] doesn’t even have job postings for available for summer 2010 internships. This brings me to my little … rant …, assuming that what these students are saying is true.

    I have to admit, I get agitated by people who have “connections” with companies. I always thought it was an unfair advantage, and hate having to resort to using “connections” myself. But all to often now, I’m hearing more and more that a person with direct connection to a company, whether it be by friend, family, co-worker, or any other odd combination of the three, has a better chance of getting hired over a more well-qualified applicant.

    You can have the most amazing background, education, and experience yet you could be virtually unnoticed. I had a friend in college who was a had a CGPA of a 3.9 in our Aerospace Engineering curriculum. A 3.9, where the graduating class average CGPA was a 2.8! He could good oral and verbal communication (worked at the school’s Writing Center and did MUN), was an RA, was a club president, and had previous working experience with an internship. And yet, for nine months that consistent of fall and spring semester, left and right our classmates were finding jobs (including the most UN-qualified druggies landing jobs at big name companies) and he had nearly faced graduation without a job until he got one at the last moment with a small contractor.

    I understand that Human Resources folks have to deal with hundreds of resumes a day, and I understand that by networking you could have a better chance of having your application at the hiring manager’s desk. Because of this, job searching seems to have manifested into this game where on the applicant-side, where

    1. You need to network
    2. You need to network
    3. You need to network
    4. You need to network
    5. You need to be good at what you do

    I say this because from me looking at the outset, I see people who have strong networks or connections getting hired into a company. At the same time, I see (and have worked with) people who absolutely no nothing about their job duties. When I ask myself, “How on Earth did this person get hired?” it usually leads to me thinking, “Oh, wait.”

    Obviously, there is a problem with the process. I don’t have a solution, yet I feel that there could be a more efficient way to find quality candidates versus what it seems to be like “let’s do a job posting and let applications come in, but let’s focus our attention on people who have connections”.

    These undergraduate students talking about their summer internship next year is a good example of this. One person’s dad works at [Company Name] and even before the hiring process starts, he takes in his child and child’s friends’ resume and hires them without considering potential applicants whose applications still have yet to come in once the jobs are posted.

    Equal Opportunity Employer? I don’t think so.

  • August23rd

    I don’t sleep in much, but I did find some amusement in this comic since I’m essentially coming from a layoff and going to graduate school:

    phd081709s

    From phdcomics.com

  • August20th

    I’ve started graduate school this Fall semester! Thinking about going back to school and getting my Master’s degree is something that makes me happy and excited about. Having worked roughly two years in a full-time job, you don’t truly realize how you’d actually miss school — or at least, I didn’t. Walking on-campus and attending classes my first day as a graduate student I felt more of an appreciation of being there, partly because of the opportunity of learning from such talented minds and partly because of my parents who are supporting my education.

    I’m aiming to pursue a Master’s in Computer Science, however in all technicality I’m not a “Master’s in Computer Science” student yet. I was admitted to the University as a graduate student in the Electrical and Computer Science department, however I need to take care of undergraduate prerequisite courses first since I’m coming from an Aerospace Engineering background. The classes that I’m taking this Fall semester are:

    • Computer Systems and Assembly Language (though my professor insists that the course should be renamed to simply “Embedded Systems”)
    • Software Engineering I
    • Discrete Structures

    Once I’m through with these classes at the end of the semester, as well as formally declaring my major, I would be formally an MSCS student in Spring.

  • August14th

    Hello, world!

    Posted in: Website

    I’ve migrated my old site, I Stand Enchanted, to this new domain, Engineer By Design. The change was mostly because I never felt that “I Stand Enchanted” truly conveyed the meaning of what I wanted my blog/portfolio to be. Instead, it was created in a failed effort from trying to come up with a domain name by combining a favorite song, I Stand, with a favorite movie, Enchanted.

    The phrase “engineer By design” fitted my site’s purpose, while miraculously at the same time was a domain that wasn’t squatted. The name truly plays on the definition of “by”. I am engineer that, well, engineers in conformity with design (hence, “Engineer By Design”), yet at the same time I am an engineer accompanied with design experience (hence, “Engineer By Design”.)

    There are still some small things that I need to fix here and there (i.e., a few more CSS modifications I’d like to implement) and coming up with a better design for my music page. I somehow feel it can be presented much more effectively and I probably also need to dig into what WordPress plugins I could use out there to make it turn out the way I want.

    I am quite happy with the solution for a better way of presenting my little art gallery. I was linking to Coroflot previously since it seemed like an easy fix from WordPress’ built-in gallery. Now, I’m using prettyPhoto, which is essentially a clone of jQuery lightbox. I might add that it’s also very, very pretty.

    I’m trying to finish this, among other things, between now and next Thursday once I start graduate school. Just one more week left!

  • August12th

    I’ve been meaning to do another song cover, preferably before I start graduate school next week. After idly playing songs on my keyboard, I happened to reach for my songbook which I haven’t touched in a while – Jim Brickman, The Disney Songbook.

    I’m a big fan of Jim Brickman ever since I first heard his song Angel Eyes during high school. His music and interpretation on songs are all so very lovely, and it’s somewhat the sort of style I tend to play whenever I find myself with a fake book of some sort.

    I’d like to get back to learning one of his medleys (Marry Poppins or Colors of the Wind/A Whole New World) but in the meantime I found myself playing around with Can You Feel the Love Tonight by overlapping the piano and saxophone voices together and finding itself in my little scraps pile:

    Scraps: Jim Brickman – Can You Feel The Love Tonight (2009)