As an engineering student I would like to know how valuable is it to get overseas experience early

I shall soon graduate from ANU in Canberra, Australia and I am trying to plan my career. 

First - I need to get Workk experience. What are good ways to get that and how do I go about it?

Parents
  • If I can answer a slightly different question "As an engineering student I would like to know how valuable is it to get a variety of experience early" then I would say hugely important. The world of engineering is extremely wide and varied, and not only will it allow your grandson to find their niche, it will also help them appreciate the value of the different engineering worlds - and that there is no one "right" way of doing engineering. For example maybe the fast moving and creative world of SMEs and the slow moving but very structured and thorough world of large organisations - just different. Or the world of R&D and the world of implementation and delivery.

    But on the actual question "As an engineering student I would like to know how valuable is it to get overseas experience early" I'd say don't worry about it. Yes it's great if you want to do it, but it suits some people more than others. And it's something you can do whenever feels right for you if you want to. Now, I guess if you try it early you can decide if the world of the expat engineer suits you, but it's fine to decide that it doesn't. What I would caution against (I mentioned this on another post recently) is that there is an engineering sub-culture of overseas engineering working, typically on large infrastructure projects, which can make those who engage in it a LOT of money, but which can also lead to a very stressful (and rather cliquey) life. Fine for those it suits, but it's only a sub-set of the engineering world, there are alternatives. So worth seeing, but just to remember that's only one story - don't let anyone convince you otherwise.

    The big value I've found of overseas experience, provided you get away from those of your own background and engage with engineers in the country you're working in, is to appreciate that engineers are engineers the world over. It makes it clear that a good engineer can come from, and be found working, anywhere.

    Interesting, and very good, question! Wishing him the very best.

    Thanks,

    Andy

Reply
  • If I can answer a slightly different question "As an engineering student I would like to know how valuable is it to get a variety of experience early" then I would say hugely important. The world of engineering is extremely wide and varied, and not only will it allow your grandson to find their niche, it will also help them appreciate the value of the different engineering worlds - and that there is no one "right" way of doing engineering. For example maybe the fast moving and creative world of SMEs and the slow moving but very structured and thorough world of large organisations - just different. Or the world of R&D and the world of implementation and delivery.

    But on the actual question "As an engineering student I would like to know how valuable is it to get overseas experience early" I'd say don't worry about it. Yes it's great if you want to do it, but it suits some people more than others. And it's something you can do whenever feels right for you if you want to. Now, I guess if you try it early you can decide if the world of the expat engineer suits you, but it's fine to decide that it doesn't. What I would caution against (I mentioned this on another post recently) is that there is an engineering sub-culture of overseas engineering working, typically on large infrastructure projects, which can make those who engage in it a LOT of money, but which can also lead to a very stressful (and rather cliquey) life. Fine for those it suits, but it's only a sub-set of the engineering world, there are alternatives. So worth seeing, but just to remember that's only one story - don't let anyone convince you otherwise.

    The big value I've found of overseas experience, provided you get away from those of your own background and engage with engineers in the country you're working in, is to appreciate that engineers are engineers the world over. It makes it clear that a good engineer can come from, and be found working, anywhere.

    Interesting, and very good, question! Wishing him the very best.

    Thanks,

    Andy

Children
  • Hello Andy:-

    I have seen the negative effects of expat engineers living in a social bubble within a host country.

    Gaining experience by working in another country should also mean learning/responding to the host countries culture.

    Peter Brooks

    Palm Bay   

  • seconded - the getting about a bit and seeing lots of things go right and go wrong, and developing that confidence that meansyou have the

    ' I can do it,  when does the plane/train/bicycle/donkey express  leave' attitude without over confidence is really important, but exactly what it is you do, and where you do it, probably less of an issue.

    What you are trying to avoid is '5 years experience, the same first year repeated 5 times'..

    If the variety is all within one area of the planet then actually travelling far to do it is less important, certainly my case in Europe. I can imagine that it may be more useful to go abroad  if one is based in a part of the world where there is less opportunity.
    Mike.