Is it really all math, all day, every day?
Lol nope. A lot of what I do is using computer programs to model soil conditions (dirt) so it’s more about understanding what soil is out there and how it acts when we build things on it/with it. The most I use is algebra
How do you feel about climate change and how it affects your job?
Simultaneously really bummed out about the terrible conditions people have/are going to have to live through and deeply grateful that I get to work on improving those shitty conditions
Has there been an increase of jobs for civil engineers in recent years do you think? If so, what are the main drivers of such increases, IYO?
What software do you use
I’m a geotechnical engineer, so Apile, slope/w, settle3, unipile etc
What is a civil engineer really?
It’s someone who designs infrastructure, so roads, buildings, bridges, sewer systems, etc. Basically if you think about anything a construction worker builds, a civil engineer/team of engineers designed it. There are different categories of civil engineers. Structural engineers make sure a building can handle the weight of everything on/in it. Transportation engineers design highways. I’m a geotechnical engineer, so I deal with soils (dirt) and make sure the ground can support whatever is being built.
I’m soon going to study as a software engineer, but in my country that’s also called a “civil engineer”, is that true in English, as well?
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Wow, that must’ve been a struggle 😓
Only for some time. Job boards in their early days were simplistic in their capture of information, you either pasted or attached a cover letter & CV but they would quickly become much more granular in gathering a lot more information about your skills, even if this made the application process a lot longer than before. It had the benefit of your skillset defining your ability rather than the title of your degree obscuring it. Also, OCR & language translation advanced really quickly there after.