Nope. Just starting my last semester of undergraduate (in Jan) in Psychology and Sociology. However, the research I will be doing next semester will be in Social Neuroscience. This past semester it was more Physiological Psychology and Psychopharmacological.
I voted no but my last project came in at 350 million,and I had to on the spot design some fixes,then ran the processes for a year before leaving,and trained the local workers in operation techniques,no formal schooling,just years of trial by fire.
Magman.. I need your help!! My golf game has gone to the dogs... Do you do Sports Psychology?? I need it bad!! RickieB
I'm not an engineer ... but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night. Actually, have been in IT for most of my career.
From experience I've found a Mechanical Engineer has to know what he is doing. A Civil Engineer is hired by a company where their family works so they don't have to admit they don't know anything.
WOW do I know what you mean. The train Engineers around my area are about 1/3 higher in salaries than almost any technical Engineer. And those benifits with the Rail system is amazing. Train conductors and Engineers retire with more money for a retirement pension than a real, real lot of people will ever make. And I really love those hours they put in too. :smile
I'm glad you like those hours, Carl I think I'm home a total of 20 hours a week if I'm lucky. But yes, the pay and benefits are great, to put it simply. Guy~
would it be narcissistic of me if I made myself proud? :mouth: haha, sorry Rickie, they don't offer a Sports Psychology course here (unfortunately). But know that if they did, I would have taken it.
Of course not, because architects never make mistakes either. Except when they are by themselves or with somebody
Not exactly an engineer, but im going to school for CAD. I guess i could eventually get myself higher in the field and become an engineer one day. Currently im working as a fry cook in a local restaurant.
This is the kind of thing my dad warned me against. A psychologist might call it "intra-personal transference."