I cant say for other countries but in the US most EET programs are ABET accredited. I myself hold a BSEET. Currently an Engineer for a Fortune 500 Company. Dont confuse EET in US with other countries.
@@trawsoza2926 You use it quite a bit when in engineering school as those courses are heavy on calculus, differential equations, linear algebra, etc. for the most part you are not doing calculus, etc. in the real world unless you go into academia. The EET route maybe alittle better as you may go as far as calculus II and the program is more practical and not as much theory which would be the case when you are out in the real world.
Sorry for hearing that. If you wanna take advice from an EET BS graduate. Then just transfer your credits and get into EE. There is a big difference between EET and EE career-wise and for masters afterwords. You will waste your time and a lot of potential with EET. Either go EE or get into CS if you're a fan of technology. sorry for being a downer, but I am there now.
@@NordiusOfficial Haha, dude dont take it personally. I am just giving the advice I wished someone have told me before getting into this career path. But It is working out especially if you're going for a master and not stopping there.
@@xila8861 I just wanted to get a decent modest pay job doing what I like building and testing stuff. For people who want to design and conduct loads of scientific research sure this isn’t the best field but it’s a fun hands on learning experience that people can grow from. I want to go back for physics or electrical engineering one day. But I may never have too.
I know people with EE degrees that work part time at a burger place since nobody will hire them without experience. Also any company will be happy to see any degree regardless. Degrees simply open up doors.
Like the video good info but I your not going to get out of doing hard mathematics in either I got a EET and thought the math was pretty difficult and it went though all the related courses it never stopped haha! But I’m glad I did it and of course the math is harder in EE. The EET is heavy Trigonometry based with some Calculus, EE is all Calculus based. So you know…
i am thinking to study electronic technician or something similar , I live in Los Angeles, do you know any good technical schools that you would recommend? Is Devry Institute or ITT any good? Also, I like to work in a field that has less pressures and not fast paces which feilds would you recommend? Thank you.
@@shshshsh3308 It won't be an easy task to be accepted. Add on that, this almost gonna cost you a wasted 1 to 2 years of your life on a place you would have been there from the beginning if you have chosen to be an EE.
@@xila8861 buzz off “academia grifter.” Applied sciences are the future. Jobs will continue to open up. Engineering isn’t a prestigious field anymore. If it wasn’t for techs you wouldn’t be able to handle the job. Most engineers don’t even know how to properly machine things and lift a wrench. They just sit on their butts and absorb money while contributing nonsensical theories and impractical ideas that the techs have to clean up. I’m not claiming this is you but ET degrees are perfectly fine. Not everyone wants to waste their lives solving complex mathematical and scientific equations. Some people just want to build, test, and diagnose.
@@acosiak6191 I can try. Directly to the point, You gonna be mostly assistance of an "Engineer". It will be hard for you to get into a leading job in comparison to an EE. EE is recognized worldwide especially if his graduation was certified on a known organization like ABET. A lot of countries don't recognize an EET as an engineer. The income of an EET is a joke compared to an EE. You will find out some technicians with a diploma would almost get the same salary as yours. Who has graduated as an EET within 3~4 years? If you wanted to get back into universities to take an EE after finishing an EET. You will find a really hard time for a university to accept you on their programs. There will be a lot of jumping around if you're seeking to progress from there. Just make the extra effort and it will be rewarding to be an EE.
@@xila8861 Good morning. Thank you for your reply. You gave a brief summary of the same advice I have been receiving from speaking to other Engineers. I'm actually a woman from a West African background. I went to university studied Political Science and ended working in government public administrative titles. It was never my true calling. And even though the money is good. I have been truly wanting to be an Engineer. Electrical Engineering is very fascinating and I have done some reading. My grasp of introductory science is strong. I considered EET at first because of my age. I'm 31 and it's 2 years of study. EE would be 4-5 years while working. My friends are telling me to do EE as well arguing that I can still have a life meet someone have w family while in school if that person cares about me. My fear is having school put my life on hold and impact my financial stability. I live in Canada.
@@acosiak6191 2 year EET programs can be good, but understand you will not be an engineer. You may be a technician and may assist engineers, but you could also work in industrial electrical maintenance, instrumentation, or manufacturing for example. I personally would suggest this field but if you want to be an engineer, it is not for you.
In the u.s., many of the 4-year EET programs are accredited by ABET and allow you to take the Fundamentals of Engineering exam. Also, depending on where you work and what your work load is, you can be hired as an electrical or electronics engineer out if college. I'm not saying the degrees are equal, however with that time and experience there is no reason a technology graduate will be as knowledgeable, as important, and get paid the same amount as a traditional engineering degree holder.
Electrical Engineering and Electrical Engineering Technology go hand in hand!
I cant say for other countries but in the US most EET programs are ABET accredited.
I myself hold a BSEET.
Currently an Engineer for a Fortune 500 Company.
Dont confuse EET in US with other countries.
Which university/college did you earn your BSEET? I started a university that dropped its BSEET program due to lack of enrollment.
Where I work EET and MET guys are engineers. ABET is the key.
Wish we had TH-cam back in 1986! Maybe I would have went the EET route and spared myself all the math and theory!!!
How often do you use math you learned from school as a EE? I'm thinking of getting a EE degree but I've never been good at math
@@trawsoza2926 You use it quite a bit when in engineering school as those courses are heavy on calculus, differential equations, linear algebra, etc. for the most part you are not doing calculus, etc. in the real world unless you go into academia. The EET route maybe alittle better as you may go as far as calculus II and the program is more practical and not as much theory which would be the case when you are out in the real world.
EET is also ABET certified. You can sit for the Professional Engineer test with it
It is nice to hear a Caribbean voice on this topic... just subscribed! Good job. I look forward to more videos.
thank you for this I’m first year in a EET program.
Sorry for hearing that. If you wanna take advice from an EET BS graduate. Then just transfer your credits and get into EE. There is a big difference between EET and EE career-wise and for masters afterwords. You will waste your time and a lot of potential with EET. Either go EE or get into CS if you're a fan of technology. sorry for being a downer, but I am there now.
@@xila8861 you clearly don’t even know how to utilize the degree at hand.
@@NordiusOfficial Haha, dude dont take it personally. I am just giving the advice I wished someone have told me before getting into this career path. But It is working out especially if you're going for a master and not stopping there.
@@xila8861 I just wanted to get a decent modest pay job doing what I like building and testing stuff. For people who want to design and conduct loads of scientific research sure this isn’t the best field but it’s a fun hands on learning experience that people can grow from. I want to go back for physics or electrical engineering one day. But I may never have too.
I know people with EE degrees that work part time at a burger place since nobody will hire them without experience. Also any company will be happy to see any degree regardless. Degrees simply open up doors.
BEETech and BEEngg both have same pathway of professional engineers with varying requirements
Like the video good info but I your not going to get out of doing hard mathematics in either I got a EET and thought the math was pretty difficult and it went though all the related courses it never stopped haha! But I’m glad I did it and of course the math is harder in EE. The EET is heavy Trigonometry based with some Calculus, EE is all Calculus based. So you know…
Both EE and EET graduates enters into the industry with job title Engineer except professional engineering practice
In this field of study I’ll be more capable to make my own machines?
This video i learn more and it,s interesting
Thank you!
i am thinking to study electronic technician or something similar , I live in Los Angeles, do you know any good technical schools that you would recommend?
Is Devry Institute or ITT any good?
Also, I like to work in a field that has less pressures and not fast paces which feilds would you recommend?
Thank you.
I want to start in EET and move to EE
Same!
yeah👁️👄👁️
@@shshshsh3308 It won't be an easy task to be accepted. Add on that, this almost gonna cost you a wasted 1 to 2 years of your life on a place you would have been there from the beginning if you have chosen to be an EE.
@@xila8861 I heard the yearly salary for an Electrical/Electronics Engineering Technologist begins at 50,000 and meets at 75,000-96,000
@@xila8861 buzz off “academia grifter.” Applied sciences are the future. Jobs will continue to open up. Engineering isn’t a prestigious field anymore. If it wasn’t for techs you wouldn’t be able to handle the job. Most engineers don’t even know how to properly machine things and lift a wrench. They just sit on their butts and absorb money while contributing nonsensical theories and impractical ideas that the techs have to clean up. I’m not claiming this is you but ET degrees are perfectly fine. Not everyone wants to waste their lives solving complex mathematical and scientific equations. Some people just want to build, test, and diagnose.
BEng Tech honours in Computing Engineering vs BEng Computer Engineering
BEng Tech Hon Power Engineering.....im going for it this year
The organization which evaluat eet degree for foreign for United States are ?
ABET or ETA International
@@bbseal6174 thanks but how can a document evaluate from ETA and abet can you tell the time that how long it takes?
@@muhammaduzair2474 sorry, im not sure what you mean by "how can a document evaluate from ETA"
@@bbseal6174 no worries but how can a person evaluate documents from these organizations.
Great explanation. Thank you
Don't get into the EET Trap. You will regret it. Be a real Engineer and do not waste your time.
Can you elaborate further..?
@@acosiak6191 I can try. Directly to the point, You gonna be mostly assistance of an "Engineer". It will be hard for you to get into a leading job in comparison to an EE. EE is recognized worldwide especially if his graduation was certified on a known organization like ABET. A lot of countries don't recognize an EET as an engineer. The income of an EET is a joke compared to an EE. You will find out some technicians with a diploma would almost get the same salary as yours. Who has graduated as an EET within 3~4 years? If you wanted to get back into universities to take an EE after finishing an EET. You will find a really hard time for a university to accept you on their programs. There will be a lot of jumping around if you're seeking to progress from there. Just make the extra effort and it will be rewarding to be an EE.
@@xila8861 Good morning. Thank you for your reply.
You gave a brief summary of the same advice I have been receiving from speaking to other Engineers. I'm actually a woman from a West African background. I went to university studied Political Science and ended working in government public administrative titles.
It was never my true calling. And even though the money is good. I have been truly wanting to be an Engineer. Electrical Engineering is very fascinating and I have done some reading. My grasp of introductory science is strong. I considered EET at first because of my age. I'm 31 and it's 2 years of study. EE would be 4-5 years while working.
My friends are telling me to do EE as well arguing that I can still have a life meet someone have w family while in school if that person cares about me. My fear is having school put my life on hold and impact my financial stability. I live in Canada.
@@acosiak6191 2 year EET programs can be good, but understand you will not be an engineer. You may be a technician and may assist engineers, but you could also work in industrial electrical maintenance, instrumentation, or manufacturing for example. I personally would suggest this field but if you want to be an engineer, it is not for you.
In the u.s., many of the 4-year EET programs are accredited by ABET and allow you to take the Fundamentals of Engineering exam. Also, depending on where you work and what your work load is, you can be hired as an electrical or electronics engineer out if college. I'm not saying the degrees are equal, however with that time and experience there is no reason a technology graduate will be as knowledgeable, as important, and get paid the same amount as a traditional engineering degree holder.