Engineering Nottingham

There's an urban myth that engineering is all about oily rags and spanners and people tinkering in sheds. Weird, because most engineers work at the forefront of design technology and they never see a spanner. Today's engineers are likely to be designing more efficient car engines, more productive wind turbines, finding ways to increase computer processing speed or decreasing flood damage along Britain's waterways than standing by a sink looking for the Swarfega - the Royal Academy of Engineering has estimated that up to 2 million people in the UK could he classified as engineers in some form or another.

Castle College
+44 (0) 115 917 5467
39 Nottingham Road
Nottingham
College Street Centre For The Performing Arts
+44 (0) 115 947 6202
College Street
Nottingham
The Castle College Nottingham
+44 (0) 845 845 0500
Maid Marian Way
Nottingham
Ncn
+44 (0) 115 910 0100
Stoney Street
Nottingham
The Sherwood Workshop
+44 (0) 115 960 3337
581A Mansfield Road
Nottingham
Prostart
18 High Street
Nottingham
Nottingham University
+44 (0) 115 951 5151
University Park
Nottingham
Nottingham Trent University
+44 (0) 115 941 8418
Chaucer Street
Nottingham
Future Store
+44 (0) 115
84 Broadmarsh
Nottingham
Nottingham Trent University Student Union
+44 (0) 115 848 6200
Shakespeare Street
Nottingham
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Engineering

Engineering

There's an urban myth that engineering is all about oily rags and spanners and people tinkering in sheds. Weird, because most engineers work at the forefront of design technology and they never see a spanner.

Today's engineers are likely to be designing more efficient car engines, more productive wind turbines, finding ways to increase computer processing speed or decreasing flood damage along Britain's waterways than standing by a sink looking for the Swarfega - the Royal Academy of Engineering has estimated that up to 2 million people in the UK could he classified as engineers in some form or another. This includes the oily rag brigade - they'll always be around - but technology has moved on and the range of engineering jobs available is mushrooming as new fields like nanotechnology and medical engineering open up.

The recent fall in student numbers is a tragedy, because there are huge opportunities right now in UK engineering. Just about every discipline has a shortage of good engineers, largely brought about by the decline in admissions over the last few years. This is particularly acute in the civil and chemical engineering fields, which seem to have suffered most from not being considered sexy enough to school students.

Some of the disciplines do fare a little better: electronic engineering and anything to do with the computer and communication industry pull in the most students. The laws of supply and demand also work in your favour. Salaries, which have never been spectacular, are improving for engineers as companies chase fewer and fewer graduates.

Over the past few years, changes by the Engineering Council UK, the profession's over-arching registration body, have been introduced to raise the academic entry level for chartered engineers. This means that all courses accredited by the council are now either three-year BEng or four-year MEng qualifications and usually require students to have decent A-level results to be accepted. In some sectors, especially civil and structural, becoming chartered is a prerequisite to practice, but for all sectors you'll find the financial rewards arc higher with it than without.

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