My husband is -- well, was -- an engineer for 30 years, and, yes, he is -- was -- paid well, but he was not valued as a person. Yes, teachers are being treated more and more poorly -- that's why teachers are leaving in droves.... re also paid and treated very well (my partner is one), so it's obvious that our society values engineering. By contrast, I'm a teacher and am paid and treated relatively poorly for what I do ...
I think the world of work is a whole lot "less friendly" than it was when I started working 30 years ago. Loyalty in the workplace is gone, more is expected, and technology has made PART of that possible.
Off-topic: People who go into teaching and engineering definitely have "a personality", and those personalities go together. Almost half my co-workers are married to engineers.
Agree.It’s not engineering that’s devalued it’s cost cutting left right and center that leave projects completed on the cheap in less time than they should be constant pressure to cut corners from management
That's what my husband says. When he was in school 35 years ago, the people who graduated along with him were mostly American. Today he says the Americans start out as engineering students, but they change to easier majors -- it's the Japanese and Indian students who finish the program /earn engineering degrees. Our American school system HAS been "dumbed down", and we demand too little from all our students -- and especially of our brightest students. We give every kid a trophy. This is one of the results.Why? Because it's hard. (It's supposed to be.) But that means people would actually have to want to learn the things that make for a successful engineer. With the dumbing down of the American educational system and the demand for recognition and compensation for little or no effort, engineering is bound to suffer.