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Sounds like a pretty sad question, but I'm just looking for suggestions here! Hopefully this paired with various interviews, lots of prospectus searching, and much mind making-upping will help me decide what to aim for.
I'm in 5th year (first year of 6th form to English people I think), so I'm studying my highers. I'm doing English, Maths, Physics, Technological Studies and Graphics. I enjoy the last two the most, but I'm adequate at all five of them (projected 5 A's) and also do loads of sport and musical stuff in my spare time. My problem is that I've no idea what I want to study at uni, or what I want to do for a living.
What I want:
-CAD/CAG content
-Not monotonous - new challenges constantly arising
-Not always indoors, and not a typical office job
-Use of brain every so often
-Decent pay
-Not necessarily much teamwork - I always seem to end up clearing up other people's mistakes which annoys me
I'm told that the industry is crying out for engineers, but what exactly do each of the types of engineer do? What alternatives do I have?
Any (relatively sensible) suggestions appreciated.
Ta
Join the forces
-Not necessarily much teamwork
Houns - Member
Join the forces
🙂
Have a look at Renewables. Lots of work here in Scotland for decades to come and we need young keen people 🙂
Choose something portable. By which I mean a job that you can do in different places around the world.
I say this because it's what I wish I'd done.
Anything in the engineering area uses maths, lots of it. That will get you into other roles too, including accounting & finance.
Civil Eng: roads, railways, bridges, infrastructure, dams, big pipes. related to structural eng: making buildings and other constructions work without falling down.
Mechanical Eng: Think engines, metals, vehicles, anything which has moving parts or comprises parts which are fixed together.
Chemical Eng: Smaller pipes. Food, pharmaceuticals, brewing, petrochemicals, nuclear: anything dealing with "stuff"
and there are other disciplines too. Look at the Engineering COuncil websites.
I'll add Electronics engineering as well - think anything from designing mobile phones, to computers to 100kW electron beam generators to mixing desks for sound. You'll need the maths and physics for that. You could also go all the way to semiconductor design as well but then you are possibly limiting yourself on the 'trasportability' bit that others were talking about.
I'm 47. I still have no idea what I want to do with my life.
HTH.
😀
If you want to head into the engineering field look at apprenticeships. You'll gain a lot of qualifications relevant to that field of engineering and should get a job at the end of it.
Getting paid rather than racking up a massive uni debt is also a bonus...
-CAD/CAG content
-Not monotonous - new challenges constantly arising
-Not always indoors, and not a typical office job
-Use of brain every so often
-Decent pay
Civil engineering.
I would recommend thinking about stuff that your have enjoyed doing over the last couple of years, writing a few down, and seeing if that points in a particular direction. e.g. are you someone who likes to tinker mechanically, fiddle with amplifiers, draw designs of things? Whatever you pick you'll be doing it for a while so pick something you like doing :). You CAN change later but it is better to do stuff that pushes your mathematical skills now rather than later as it is tough to get your maths back up to speed at 40.
-Not monotonous - new challenges constantly arising
This bit is up to you, be up for taking new stuff when it arises even if you aren't quite ready for it. The more you take them up the more they will start to appear.
Not necessarily much teamwork - I always seem to end up clearing up other people's mistakes which annoys me
The only way to avoid working in a team in the end is to either work for youself or be so totally brilliant at something that others will leave you to yourself. Better to get on with the teamwork really
I'm adequate at all five of them (projected 5 A's)
Improve your English for a start! Adequate is not the best description of 5 grade A's 😯
Also when you say not always indoors do you mean outside if it's sunny? Outdoors is fun with the right people and sunshine otherwise it's just grim.
Portable is key these days as there are no jobs for life and moving is a good way of getting on.
As my eldest said, I might not want to go to Uni, but I have to - as its expected (by employers) these days.
But you're only 16/17, don't worry about it.
1. You're more likely to successful and therefore employable if you do something you really like doing... IME it means you'll be motivated to do a good job, and break through any barriers in your way.
Too many people* spend their working life doing something they don't even enjoy, it's a waste
2.
sort out your perfectionism! It'll hold you backI'm adequate at all five of them (projected 5 A's)
3. Hardly anyone at your age knows what they really want to do - most graduates don't either. Do a degree you're interested in and then see what you think would be my advice
* including me!
Try for:
Oxbridge
Harvard
MIT (I'd kill to get into MIT)
Yale
Stanford
Princeton
You won't regret graduating from either of these, although the work load may seem dire in your first year. Any of these will open doors to you that you would never have thought existed and not necessarily in your degree field if you so choose, a good degree from either of these will prove to an employer your pretty much capable of putting your mind to anything. For example, if you apply for a Finance job with a degree in Engineering from MIT....they will definitely take notice of you.
By the sounds of it though, you should have done Biology if you want to do a bit of work outdoors and use your brain.
If you can afford it or you can convince someone to give you a grant, stateside is where it's at in terms of scientific research. If you find yourself unable to do undergraduate there then save up and take a masters in the States and/or do a year there on Erasmus during your undergraduate - whatever you do...get international experience.
It's common to feel like you don't have an overwhelmingly strong calling to do something at 17 - this describes most people. Given your background, you're probably best keeping your options open by taking a maths, physical sciences or (if you must) engineering degree at a Russell group university. These will be broad degrees where there's certain to be something that clicks with you.
You need to decide if you're a seeker of truth (maths, physics) or whether you're more in to pipe fitting (engineering). Either pathway can be very rewarding.
Stick with the maths for as long as you can keep advancing your knowledge, in the long run it'll give you a good income and flexibility in the job market. The rufty tufty fun stuff you can do at the weekends.
Yeah Maths is a good choice.....I'm moving away from my undergrad in Biomedical Science to Biometry/Medical Statistics.
I should end up with a nice rounded education in Biology, Chemistry and Mathematics.
Just concentrate on your education for now and aim for a top university. You have to be better than everyone else around you - read, read and read around your subjects - don't just cover the course material - find things that interest you so that you can talk to interviewers about things that will impress them.
Forget about drugs, booze and birds. The latter will come once you start doing well - I wish I was your age now so I had the sense to be the best I could have been at that age.....instead I ended up doing things the hard way.
Gosh, at your age my 3 main priorities were getting off my face, attempting to shag girls and going to gigs. My early career choices were also driven by those 3 wants. You sound very sensible, you will be fine.
Good question.... nuclear industry will always want well educated and qualified employees, whether to build new power stations or to decomission old ones (I don't see the world ever not wanting electricity, so it will always have a future). Npower used to run a really good apprenticeship/sponsorship scheme for engineers to work in the general sector, especially ndt, but I'm sure there will be others too.
CERN have paid (yes, really) programmes for graduates from all the contributing countries and its really good pay. The UK does not provide enough applicants for them, they would like us to send more (this is current, I was there last month).
At the end of the day pick a course that you think you will enjoy that takes you in the direction you hope to go in, and then embrace what happens along the way.
Good luck, and enjoy the journey
(P.s I'm a teacher who has worked in industry in the UK and overseas)
(Pps I've been marking all evening and out on a second job all day, so apologies for any spelling etc in advance to any critics out there).
Forget about drugs, booze and birds.
Worst advice ever.
Worst advice ever.
I sincerely regret doing all the shit I did at his age.
It's taken me a good 8 years since I was 16 to start to tire of the three things I've just mentioned and I'm only now just starting to grasp the fact I can go anywhere or do anything as long as I stay motivated and that I should stop missing the chance to grab opportunities by the neck.
I sincerely regret doing all the shit I did at his age
Unlucky, i had a ball and my career hasn't suffered due any of it.
Have you thought of Architecture/Architectural technician/Town and Country Planning kind of areas?
Renewables is a good call.
Unlucky, i had a ball and my career hasn't suffered due any of it.
I guess some people can handle both but some of us get distracted, I have a bit of a one track mind.
Comparing my friends that did very VERY well.... to the ones that got say....a 2:2 in Physics or whatever at Sheffield....then their idea of success is a whole other ball game.
There's coasting and doing okay then there is making the most of yourself.
I think that is one of the most difficult questions in life. I have no idea. Try and do something thoughtful and caring? bwaarp, you sound like such an asshole.
Don't ask me, i'm 39 and i've just walked away voluntarily from a £75k+ a year job because i didn't really like the way the job was being run......... /idiot
Anyway did you get into Oxbridge or an Ivy league..
Nope, nor did i ever aspire to. I think any response i give you on where i am at in life will just sound a bit smug, so I'll not bother. But I'm glad you have found your focus and drive.
Smell it....sorry mate didn't mean to word it like that...I edited it....what I was trying to get at is that I have plenty of friends who have done okay....landed in decent jobs after graduating from a redbrick.....but a few of them could have done much much better had they not been so lazy or distracted.
And they know and regret the fact they didn't push themselves.
Yes, I've known a couple of guys who graduated from Oxford that I used to go punting with off our face on shrooms etc that were heavy drug users and womanizers throughout their time at Oxford - these were the exception to the rule - my point being is that very few students can party hard and be really successful at the same time.
You'll need more that 5 As at highers to get in to those, you'll need a few advanced highers too. You'll need AAB or AA in advanced highers for Oxford for instance.Try for:Oxbridge
Harvard
MIT (I'd kill to get into MIT)
Yale
Stanford
Princeton
I would recomend some mathsy engineering - very versatile if maybe not as hands on as civil engineering. You can help develop cutting edge technologies/products/projects.
I'm half way though my research masters and am none the wiser as to what I want to do, worked in renewables for a year and it was pants, gold-rush industry full of cowboys and the planning policy is ridiculously inconsistent.
My advice would be to do something useful but general if you're unsure, no point getting stuck with something that bores you!
Meh, when I was at 6th form we didn't have advanced highers! 
EDIT: He won't need more than three highers at A*AA and AA/AAB at advanced highers for most Oxford courses.
I know of a fair few people from a few years back with a silly amount of A-levels at A grades that never got in....and one that did with AAB. They look at other aspects of the student as well.
I've logged in for the first time in ages to post on this...
Whatever you do at 30 you'll say "with the benefit of hindsight..."
Assuming you pick the University route, and I'm not it's strongest advocate with two subject specific degrees in what turns out to be the wrong subject - two bits of advice:
1. From my experience only a handful of Graduates go on to do what they thought they'd end up doing, pick a good university (Russell Group, regardless of what others say this does matter when you get to the sift) and a broad(ish) degree, not too specific, say mechanical/Structural Engineering. Don't do work experience in the holidays, pursue women (...) instead, this is the best chance you'll get. Fight light for you life to get on a graduate scheme with a big company (say Siemens, Nissan etc...) and jump ship after two or three years. This is when you'll demand a real salary - ride the graduate scheme out.
2. Nepotism works. If you know anyone - use them. That extends to asking on forums where people have common interests*.
Good luck. Enjoy yourself. At some point you'll work out it's not a race. 🙂
* Mechanical/Structural/Acoustic/Drafting/Projects, in the North East drop me a mail.
Ps. I'm an Architect. It's a fantastic couple of degrees but utterly useless if you imagine working less that 60 hours a week for a modest wage.
I did almost the same Highers as you*, and the best advice I got was not to do something practical at Uni, do someone that interests me. So I did Physics and Astronomy. Employers honestly don't really care all that much exactly what your degree is in for a lot of things, they care that you're smart and able to learn. I ended up going straight into a very well-paid job with IBM.
Then left after 8 months to start a bike business 😉
*and I got 5 As too...
Agree with many above uni is a route to a job as most employers seem to use "has degree" for a blanket filter of ability (how wrong can people be)
Unless you want to do a specific job (doctor/vet/dentist/Architect) The most important thing you can learn at uni is independence, resolve and a bit about who you are. The rest (including the bit of paper is a bonus). Make sure the course has some relevance but should really tick a load of boxes that say practical, thinker, problem solver etc.
Live at uni, join things experience things things - life I think they call it. That is what makes a good recruit.
If you join a graduate scheme be ready to learn and remember having a degree doesn't make you good at a job learn from those around you or you will just be a banker graduate who reckons they know it all.
I pissed my degree up the wall left with nothing but the experience part and it's done me well, I wouldn't swap that for the world.
I'm currently consulting for the sort of companies that wouldn't look at my CV as there is no degree on it. I'm paid better than their staff who they picked over me. 5 years down the line the degree doesn't matter it's what you learn despite it that does.
well said mikewsmith. I feel a
bit of anger and bitternes there though ;~)
no anger or bitterness, I work part time have earn enough to live comfortably and ride my bikes - leaving the UK helped though
study abroad. if possible, do it in another language. There are loads of options in france, belgium, holland, italy, spain, denmark, sweden, finland and even latvia to study engineering/biology/physics/chemistry disciplines at uni, in english if you need.
Phwoaarr, didn't expect this much advice!
My brother did the same stuff as me and ended up doing MEng at Strathclyde, and loves it. I think I'd prefer to stay in Scotland for uni, and probably aim in a Glasgow direction, but that preference could change with time.
Got a career interview set up through school which should give me some more ideas.
Ending up working with bikes is a backup plan, I love building/fixing bikes so it's something I'd almost certainly enjoy.
Keep 'em coming 😀
I love building/fixing bikes so it's something I'd almost certainly enjoy.
Seek bike shop clarification on that one 😆
Oil and gas industy?
When I graduated with a Beng 20 years ago we were told the oil industry was on it's knees and there was no future in it... it's still here and still crying out for good engineers.
Consider Petroleum Engineering and if you like travel and hands-on problem solving consider Drilling and Completions rather than the boffining that is Geologist/Reservoir/Petroleum Technologist.
Drilling/Completions is crying out for real engineers. Look at the Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) website for ideas.
I'd suggest a Mechanical Engineering Degree, from the best university you can get into.. This will give you a strong foundation to build on - you can always change direction when you've done it.
Glasgow would be a good place to study.
Don't listen to those people who reckon a degree makes no difference - they'll never know if it would have made any difference to them, but it opens doors when you are younger.. and as others have said, a lot of jobs want one as a standard of education, rather than for the specific knowledge it gives you.
Oh, and study hard at Uni - a 2-1 or first is worth a lot more than a Desmond or a Thora...
I suspect these two contradict each other after the first couple of years 24/7!What I want:
-CAD/CAG content
-Not monotonous - new challenges constantly arising
I'm not sure what a typical office job is, but almost certainly anything that involves you doing the computer design work is going to be mostly indoors. If you start spending time on site you probably get someone else to do the CAD work.
-Not always indoors, and not a typical office job
-Use of brain every so often
-Decent pay
be aware that using your brain creatively or academically is not always correlated with good pay.
-Not necessarily much teamwork - I always seem to end up clearing up other people's mistakes which annoys me
As an employer this worries me. I can't think of many jobs where some degree of teamwork / collaboration is not required at least some of the time. What I am hoping (?) is that this is because you are a level above your peers and so either they can slack knowing you will do it or you have higher standards/expectations than your peers. If so you need to learn some new skills to coach and get your peers up to your level - although I appreciate in many schools that attitude is likely to get you a beating rather than respect! If you pick the right uni you will find the technical abilities of your new peers is much closer matched. When you find a good team who deliver it is very rewarding.
In terms of salary here are two things which nobody explained to me (properly) at 16/17... (i) £25k a year sounds like a lot of money, but when you are 30 and many of your peers are earning 50+% more it suddenly seems not to be, especially if you spent 5 yrs training and look at others on the same pay who can earn that with no quals... Bear in mind that salaries are determined by market forces so when demand is greater than supply they go up. Any "popular" job to train in is likely to be over supplied. (ii) pensions are important. You will hear of people striking over them but as its 3-4x your lifetime away it probably all seems a bit insignificant. If you are going to do a job that doesn't make you rich in the short term think about (a) job security (b) pension, retirement age etc.
So here are a couple of ideas that you might not have considered that seem to fit with your mix...
(i) How about teaching? You are probably too young to be sure about that unless you are convinced but Heriot Watt (and therefore possibly others) used to do Maths with Education and Physics with Education courses. You still get a physics / maths degree (and I think can bail out mid course onto mainstream phys/maths if you suddenly decide not to go there - but many of the skills you learn on the education bit would be transferable to the real world). Its reasonably paid rather than well paid but those are important, shortage subjects so plenty of demand and job security and pensions etc will be better than most others. Its not an office job per se, whilst there is some team work its not the main part of the job, and there are options to make it challenging, career progression, etc...
(ii) Software development? There is a shortage, and I pay 30 yr old developers £40k+ a year, which most people would say is well paid. Using CAD/CAM/CAG is fun for a little while but dull in the end. With your accademic ability you could be creating the tools for others to use rather than simply making pretty pictures. There may be teamwork involved, but some roles do allow you to geek out on your own. Team workers will earn more though. Team leaders more again! Outdoors would be unusual though!
(iii) Law. My schooling wasn't that different to yours and nothing would have been further from my mind than law (probably because my only experience of it was on TV). I now spend a lot of time working with lawyers and find it fascinating / challenging, and covers a much wider area of work than I ever appreciated. Not saying it is your dream job (or even mine) but beware that some of your 'career stereotypes' are probably totally wrong.
My lesson has been; whatever you choose, do what you genuinely want to do, not what you [i]think[/i] you should. We can convince ourselves quite strongly and fixate on a narrow goal, but I think a broader direction close to your real interests has more mileage.
You'll only end up making the preferred choice after the wasted time, it's the life equivalent of buying the cheap bike part, realising it's a bit crap and having to get the thing you originally wanted anyway!
Study something you love with options, not something you like a bit with a specific goal. Hopefully as you learn you'll find out new things (that's the whole point right?) and there will be new opportunities available you are not currently aware of. Your grades suggest you have the potential and discipline for further study, learn as much as you can.
Take a gap year, gain some additional life experience, contact the sort of people you'd like to work for and ask them directly what they would want.
A strong sentiment in your first post is one of autonomy, working with others who are independently strong at what they do and the capacity to be creative with your problem solving. This will come when you are in the minority of holding knowledge about something and once you've found you're specialism. This is unlikely to be clarified soon, but is a good thing to keep in mind.
Maybe ask Hope if you can do a work placement? Go and stay in/near Barnoldswick for a bit, ride your legs off and play with CNC milling machines 🙂
Take a gap year, gain some additional life experience.
This. I can't believe it got to the second page before someone suggested it!
Doesn't really matter if you spend it working or shagging your way around Asia, it'll help you put things into perspective to get off the "educational conveyor belt" for a while, give you a maturity your peers won't have, and can be a helluva lotta fun!
It seems a big deal to lose a year at this stage, but believe me its not 'lost', and will pay back in time. In fact, I've taken three "gap years" at various times in my life (the last one was re-named a mid-life crisis 🙂 ), when I've been in a bit of a rut and needed to step back and take stock of things, and have never regretted it!
+1 for the gap year/traveling. Even just 3 months by myself in a different country made me grow up (a bit) more than 3 years at uni did. Gave me so much more confidence as well.
OP - good for you, that you are asking sensible questions. But my advice would be don't panic and don't rush. I would recommend staying in the excellent Scottish system as Unis give you greater flexibility in the first two years FWIW, I only chose my career in my final (4th) year at a Scottish Uni but the four years gave me plenty of time to learn, experiment and to have a good time. Some people have a clear view re vocations at your age. Others don't. Take your time and do enjoy youself before life gets really serious!
You're pretty much describing my job 🙂 Design Engineer for an oil service company working on downhole tools for the oil industry.
Get to work outside / in a big workshop building stuff occassionally when it goes on test. Design new innovative (hopefully) tools. Mobile - can be done anywhere in the world. Lots of jobs right now etc etc. You basically need to do a Mechanical Engineering degree for it or start as a drafter and work up (that's what I did with my employer sponsoring to do my degree). Graduate's start at about £30k pa sometimes with a signing-on bonus if you negotiate.
Where are you based? If you're anywhere near Aberdeen I could sort out a week or more of some work experience to see what you think.
Oli.
As an employer this worries me. I can't think of many jobs where some degree of teamwork / collaboration is not required at least some of the time. What I am hoping (?) is that this is because you are a level above your peers and so either they can slack knowing you will do it or you have higher standards/expectations than your peers. If so you need to learn some new skills to coach and get your peers up to your level - although I appreciate in many schools that attitude is likely to get you a beating rather than respect! If you pick the right uni you will find the technical abilities of your new peers is much closer matched. When you find a good team who deliver it is very rewarding.
As it's school, a lot of people tend to have a "that'll do" attitude to teamwork, which really annoys me. I am usually the really sad one that wants it to be perfect.. I do some sports coaching and have a leadership role in the school so often I do find it's possible to get some enthusiasm going, but it's awful hard work when people are constantly not bothering cause it's not cool, etc.
Software development?
I have a cousin who's very successful at this - hadn't even considered asking him about it! I'll look into it, thanks.
Take a gap year, gain some additional life experience
A gap year is something I've always wanted to take, but as I'm the sort of person who practically forgets how to write his own name after 6 weeks off for summer, I'm not sure if it's worth it for the time I might take to get back into it. Having said that, I could come back completely fresh and raring to go, filled with enthusiasm from my amazing experiences, I just don't know.
I would recommend staying in the excellent Scottish system
That's another thing, I think Scottish Unis are free for me but others aren't? I'm more likely to sway towards something that's free..
You're pretty much describing my job Design Engineer for an oil service company working on downhole tools for the oil industry.Get to work outside / in a big workshop building stuff occassionally when it goes on test. Design new innovative (hopefully) tools. Mobile - can be done anywhere in the world. Lots of jobs right now etc etc. You basically need to do a Mechanical Engineering degree for it or start as a drafter and work up (that's what I did with my employer sponsoring to do my degree). Graduate's start at about £30k pa sometimes with a signing-on bonus if you negotiate.
Where are you based? If you're anywhere near Aberdeen I could sort out a week or more of some work experience to see what you think.
Sounds great! I'm down in Dundee, so not too far off. Can you email me with any more details please? Possibility a short placement in Summer might be helpful. Email: poltheball AT hotmail DOT com
I think I'm also going to look into Civil Engineering, it seems to combine most of the things I enjoy. I know I'm not going to find a job that fits all of the points in my initial description, and the teamwork one was a bit of an exaggeration (made me sound like a right grumpy hermit), but they were just to help describe a bit of what I'm like to an audience of unknown people.
Again, thanks for all suggestions, some of these have been really helpful!
Any further advice greatly appreciated.
Just an example of one of many opportunities out there...
http://www.totaljobs.com/JobSearch/JobDetails.aspx?JobId=54931995&Keywords=&CompanyId=615%2c387
Sounds ok to me.
Take a year off before going to Uni. Try as many different jobs in as many different places as you can. You'll work out how to live independently and what work you like and what you do t like.
Basically, explore and try as much as you can.
From you A levels and interests it does sound like you should be looking at Engineering courses. Do you have a careers department who you could get advice from?
Failing that then start googling and read some prospectuses (or prospecti?)
If you do a Science/Engineering degree at uni you should be ok to get a job as you will have useful transferable skills. You should pick you degree based on something you enjoy. As someone said near the start, if you enjoy it then you will do well. Your degree does not choose you future career prospects. There are plenty of employers out there who take all degrees and then retrain them in specific roles. This is very typical of "graduate roles". I did chemistry and my first job was production efficiency improvement with a fruit juice company. My wife did biochemistry and now works in IT.
A gap year could be some good advice - make it worthwhile though. Either travel (working visa to somewhere like Australia or Newzealand) or get an internship to experiment with a career choice and get some valuable experience.
http://www.rolls-royce.com/careers/what_can_do/graduates/apprenticeships/index.jsp
http://www.woodgroup.com/our-people/students-graduates/uk-graduate-faqs/pages/default.aspx
http://www.weir.co.uk/Careers/WorkingatWeir/Ajourneytoexcellence.aspx
http://www.jaguarlandrovercareers.com/apprentices/be-part-of-it/?sType=071010
Thanks Macavity!
Either travel (working visa to somewhere like Australia or Newzealand)
That's the part of the world I'd be aiming for if I did take a gap year, as I know quite a few people over there (and I've heard the biking in NZ is pretty awesome..)
Do you have a careers department who you could get advice from?Failing that then start googling and read some prospectuses (or prospecti?)
Yes, I've got an interview set up which should be helpful. I've read a few prospect(i?) but I don't really know what I'm looking for. I'll be going to a few uni open days as well to see which atmospheres are good and suchlike stuff.
I completed a 4 year apprenticeship, followed by a BEng at University in automotive engineering
I'm now 37 and have been in an executive engineering role within a small aerospace company for 5 years. Stated 10 years ago and worked my way up
initially, i knew zero about planes, but i quickly learnt a lot and i'm still passionate and love getting up for work in the morning
What would i have done differently - i would have studied Mechanical Engineering, i would have done a year in industry and maybe not partied quite as hard at Uni
Also - teamwork - get used to it if you want to make money
Good luck mate!
Year out, travel the world, take your time deciding. And remember that you don't have to stick with one job/career for life.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01pth0t
"Prof Robert Mair
Availability:over a year left to listen
Duration: 28 minutes
First broadcast:Tuesday 15 January 2013Jim Al-Khalili talks to Robert Mair, professor of Civil engineering at Cambridge University about his life as an engineer in academia and industry and his expertise on finding innovative solutions to the problems of building tunnels under already congested cities.
He talks about his innovative technique of 'compensation grouting' which prevented Big Ben from tilting and even cracking and coming away from the Houses of Parliament during Jubilee line extension.
Crossrail is one of the biggest engineering projects in Europe and involves constructing 26 miles of new tunnels underneath London's busy streets and under the existing tube network. Robert talks the latest tunnelling technology being used and the huge drilling machines with names like 'Ada' and Phyliss' which use high pressure to minimise ground movements as they drill and even have a kitchen and bathroom facilities on board.
He also talks about his latest work on how smart sensors which can harvest their own energy. And when built into buildings, roads, tunnels they could make sure the engineering projects of the future will be able to continuously monitor and report on their own safety."
When you find the answer let me know please.
29, Software Developer, hate it. Not been to uni, haven't got a clue what I want to do.
[i]It's better to be at the bottom of a ladder you want to climb than half way up one you don't.[/i] Just need to find the right ladder.
http://www.careers.manchester.ac.uk/students/options/study/undergraduate/sponsorship/epsdegrees/
http://www.strath.ac.uk/na-me/undergraduatestudies/scholarshipssponsorships/
http://www.fnc.co.uk/Careers/StudentSponsorship/tabid/87/language/en-GB/Default.aspx
http://www.aggreko.com/careers/
http://www.jobsite.co.uk/job/uk-development-manager-onshore-wind-945020150?src=search
http://www.jobsite.co.uk/job/project-manager-christchurch-new-zealand-945073026?src=search
Take a gap year, gain some additional life experience.
That's another thing, I think Scottish Unis are free for me but others aren't? I'm more likely to sway towards something that's free..
Look at european courses. LOADS of free ones, including free ones taught in English. You're scottish, scotland has free tuition for EU nationals aswell as scots, the same free tuition often applies in europe. Look at german engineering courses! It's just the English which have a crumby deal with uni.
