Waha who the fuck are you talking too? Tons of people that I talk to here at UBC already have jobs lined up for them for when they're done, and these people are in 3rd/4th year. I was talking to a 4th year mining engineering student the other day. He said that before he accepted the job that he wanted to take for after he graduates, he turned down 3 jobs from major companies that were willing to pay him $70,000+ per year. Now he'll be working near Vancouver for most of the year and he'll be getting paid to travel on business for 3 or 4 months of the year. I talked to another mining engineer a few days ago, he graduated from UBC and is now 44.... he's been to 159 different countries because of his job. If you ask me, I think that's really cool, and I'd love to visit all sorts of different places in the world, even if it was for my job. Oh, and you can do this with any specialization in engineering, not just mining.
"Doctorate pays more".... lets disect this statement for a while... actually it shouldn't take very long...
1. A doctorate in what?... please specify.
2. A doctorate takes a LOT more time than a BASC in engineering, and therefore costs you a lot more money to get.
You shouldn't even try to draw a comparison between the two. Besides, a person with a BASC in engineering can still get a doctorate.
I was gonna refrain from adding a "dumbass" to the end of this part of my post, but I don't think I will refrain after all.
dumbass.
Anyways, back to the original subject of the thread...
Engineering at any school is gonna be a ton of work. For example, last semester i had an 18 credit courseload, while it only takes 9 credits per semester to be "full time." I averaged 21 hours of class/tutorial/labs per week. This semester, i again have the potential to earn 18 credits, but I now spend 27 hours per week in class/tutorial/labs. Oh, and I'm in first year engineering, which, at UBC, is the same for everyone, with specialization taking place at the beginning of second year.
That said, I still have time to party, ski, and just generally have a good time. Sometimes you'll feel like the work never ends, but it will, and you just have to slug through it and do your best to get it all done. Personally, I'm pretty much always tired due to general lack of sleep, but that's probably my own fault for going on NS all the time instead of doing my work during the day, and therefore forcing myself to do it until late hours of the night. If you concentrate on getting stuff done, you'll have plenty of time to do whatever you want. If you budget your time well, you should have no problems with the workload. If you don't, you'll eventually be lacking so much sleep that it'll be like you're wide awake all the time.... trust me. Oh, but try to avoid that, because there's a big crash at the end and it sucks when it happens during finals.
If you think you'll enjoy it, give it a try. There's no harm in going to school, discovering that you don't like civil engineering, and switching into another type of engineering, switching into another faculty, or just leaving university/college in favor of a trade.
hmm... that was kinda long.