6 Career Fairs Do’s and Don’t

College career fair is an on campus meet and greet between potential employees (students) and potential employers (companies and government agencies).  Your school is likely to have multiple career fairs at different time during the year (i.e. fall, winter, spring) and there might even be an engineering specific career fair.  My advice is to go to the engineering career fair for sure, but make sure you also look up the list of companies at the general career fairs (should be on the career center website) to see if there are engineering companies in the general career fairs that you can go meet with as well.  It’s easy to write off going to the career fair as a waste of time, but I will tell you this: I have gotten both an internship and job offers from the career fairs that I have attended.  Although there are definitely some companies that go to career fairs to promote themselves rather than do any serious hiring, I have been part of company recruiting teams that go to the college career fairs to really find candidates to hire.  Since I have been on both sides (being both a company’s representative and a student) at many career fairs, here are 6 do’s and don’t that you should know to be effective at these events.

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Job Hunt: Are You Ready?

It’s difficult start thinking about life after college, but now is the time to start your job search.  I’m sure your classmates are already knee deep in the process, so it’s time for you to do it too.  Here are 6 resources to help you to find your first full-time engineering job.  These resources are also available for recent graduates who are still looking for work. Continue reading “Job Hunt: Are You Ready?”

EIT/FE Exam: Everything You Ever Want to Know About It

OK, so you hear about an EIT or FE exam, but you don’t know much about it.  Well, you are in luck!  I have summarized below everything you ever want to know about this test.

What is the EIT/FE exam?

The Fundamentals of Engineering (FE) exam, also known as Engineer-In-Training (EIT) exam, is the first step in the journey to obtain your Professional Engineering (PE) license.  The test is designed for recent college graduates or students who are close to finishing an under graduate engineering degree from an EAC/ABET-accredited program. The first paper-based FE exam was administered by National Council of Examiners for Engineering and Surveying (NCEES) in 1965 and transitioned to a computer-based exam in 2014.   The test contains 110 multiple-choice questions and lasts around 6 hours.

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