I’m trying to figure out how an 8 year Starbucks Barista, with only my GED, can get into schooling for such a field. This has always fascinated me since I was a child.
A degree in Civil/Mechanical Engineering is almost certainly required to enter the field as a facility or treatment system designer or intern. Many courses in mathematics, physics, chemistry, and biology must be completed to get a Civil Engineering degree. My suggestion would be to start small and begin taking engineering prerequisite courses at your local communnity college. This is how I started, and I recently graduated university in December. I had help paying for school with government grants and student loans. I am also currently exploring possibilities in this field. It seems very interesting!
If you just want to step in the field, I recommend applying for water operator jobs. If you have time and a little bit of money then you can sign up for water operator classes. Many employers will also pay for your licensure and help you with the courses you need. Water has a lot of opportunities and a lot of ways to move up.
So everyone is majoring in water resources engineering? Actually in my university they have a department for WRE where they give bsc and msc degree on water resources engineering. I wonder how much that will affect my chances of getting a job as a water resources engineer when people actually get bsc in civil and then msc in water
I see no reason why they couldn't take the salt and use it for commercial use, like selling it in stores? Benefits the company with profits and benefits consumers with more salt that isn't harmful to the environment.
well the thing is not all of it is complete salt like what we use in food. they salt we use is mined and secondly the process of reverse osmosis leaves you with fresh drinking water but also brine which is highly concentrated salt water. if they pour it back into the ocean that would ruin a lot of sea and coral ecosystems
yo i just your video and its amazing. just asking if you have time so we can interview you for our engineering course. currently a freshman student. hope u see this Godbless ❤️
I’m trying to figure out how an 8 year Starbucks Barista, with only my GED, can get into schooling for such a field. This has always fascinated me since I was a child.
A degree in Civil/Mechanical Engineering is almost certainly required to enter the field as a facility or treatment system designer or intern. Many courses in mathematics, physics, chemistry, and biology must be completed to get a Civil Engineering degree. My suggestion would be to start small and begin taking engineering prerequisite courses at your local communnity college. This is how I started, and I recently graduated university in December. I had help paying for school with government grants and student loans. I am also currently exploring possibilities in this field. It seems very interesting!
If you just want to step in the field, I recommend applying for water operator jobs. If you have time and a little bit of money then you can sign up for water operator classes. Many employers will also pay for your licensure and help you with the courses you need. Water has a lot of opportunities and a lot of ways to move up.
I love water engineering. I want to specialize as a water engineer under the broad specialists in Civil Engineering 🙏🙏
Awesome! Knowing what you want is just an excellent first step, keep going for it!
Me too
Mrs Cornais will be proud
The video is fantastic!
So everyone is majoring in water resources engineering? Actually in my university they have a department for WRE where they give bsc and msc degree on water resources engineering. I wonder how much that will affect my chances of getting a job as a water resources engineer when people actually get bsc in civil and then msc in water
One of the best water shortage solutions is desalination but it is undeniably very expensive.
You are right. There is no easy fix. We hope that many generations and minds connect over this issue for a solution!
It also creates lots of brine and requires a lot of energy
AWESOME VIDEO
Awesome video! I like it
What happen to the salt after inverse osmos? they put it back in the ocean ??? What will happen to the ecosystem?? Does anyone know?
french fries
I see no reason why they couldn't take the salt and use it for commercial use, like selling it in stores? Benefits the company with profits and benefits consumers with more salt that isn't harmful to the environment.
well the thing is not all of it is complete salt like what we use in food. they salt we use is mined and secondly the process of reverse osmosis leaves you with fresh drinking water but also brine which is highly concentrated salt water. if they pour it back into the ocean that would ruin a lot of sea and coral ecosystems
@@joeyhuynh5893I believe they have to diffuse it on the ocean a couple miles off shore…but I’m also wondering how that would affect the ecosystem
yo i just your video and its amazing. just asking if you have time so we can interview you for our engineering course. currently a freshman student. hope u see this Godbless ❤️
Hi Glendyl, please email Shauna at sbadheka@macfreefilms.com to point you in the right direction.
@@Macgillivrayfreemanfilms thankyou so much sir appreciated❤️
There is a link to a song from spongebob in the description. Thought that was kinda funny
JESUS
that's rude
@@huntershinn4294 Your look like a drugged version of calliou
@@lucybevan4048 You look like shrek's pale daughter
👍🏻
🍪
bro
ikr
Dude.
pov: your here cause of school
yes
@@justsomewater8754 ayy we go to the same school
Imagine seeing yhis comment