Every once in awhile we encounter a piece of writing, a passage or a phrase that strikes a chord with us. It is a grouping of words we will remember for quite some time and can shape the decisions we make, how we act and who we become. The story you are about to read does not concern one of those phrases... or maybe it does...
Like most first year engineering students, I was required to take an Introduction to Engineering course. Ours had a book and apparently we were supposed to be reading it. At some point during the semester some ill-placed motivation drove me to decide to actually do the next reading assignment--Chapter 6. The Chapter was entitled "Engineers and the Real World" and the first sentence read:
"Now that you've decided upon engineering as a career and have gotten this far in the book, it's time for the bad news: If you become an engineer, you will be destined for oblivion."
I closed the book.
Maybe I was on to something with that whole 'not reading' thing. In fact, I didn't open the book again until much later. The phrase did effect me, but in an "oh yeah? Well, we'll see about that!" kind of way, instead of the inspirational "I've found my calling" way an apprehensive new engineer might want. Regardless, when I opened the book for the second time and actually read past the first sentence, I found that the author really made a great point, all within the first paragraph:"Think about it. The press and the broadcast media rarely cover the lives of engineers. The individual exploits of politicians,... actors,... and sports figures all receive coverage in the press... The only time that engineers do receive detailed coverage is when a major failure causes some public catastrophe."The author goes on to express the view that the public held engineers responsible for, well, everything and that once there is an interruption in say, their taken-for-granted electrical grid, the public blamed the blackout

"It's absolutely stupid that we live without an ozone layer. We have men, we've got rockets, we've got saran wrap--FIX IT!!!"
We're working on it.
What are your thoughts on how the public and the press view the engineering profession? View Pollsource: Horenstein, M. (2002). Design Concepts For Engineers ( 2nd ed.). Upper Saddle River: Prentice Hall, 178. glasses image: http://www.rudecactus.com/2009/03/ inspiration ship image: mab2413
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