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I recently graduated from an ABET-certified Software Engineering program. Most of my classes overlapped with the Computer & Electrical engineering programs. Despite this, I frequently receive flack that Software Engineering isn't a real "engineering" degree. I feel that this stigma is also affecting my career since this is such a prevalent opinion.

To combat this stigma and thus become more appealing to employers, I have considered taking the Electrical and Computer PE Exam. Admittedly, I have no idea what is on the exam, but I have shown proficiency in the area of electromagnetism, which gives me some small amount of confidence.

To those who have a background in management/job interviewing, and to those who are knowledgeable about the exam, I am wondering whether taking the PE exam will be a worthwhile task for me to take on.

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If you want to become a software engineer there is nothing wrong with a software engineering degree! – RichardOD Sep 30 at 14:40
Are you referring to this exam: ncees.org/exams/professional/… – Thomas Owens Sep 30 at 14:53
@Thomas Owens Yes... – James Jones Sep 30 at 14:54
Wow.. Looking at that spec, it seems like I covered 95% of that stuff in school. – James Jones Sep 30 at 14:56
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If you're looking for a software engineering certification, you might want to consider the IEEE Computer Society's CSDP: www2.computer.org/portal/web/certification However, I doubt that this meets Canada's requirements for a PE. – PTBNL Sep 30 at 15:02

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The PE exam does not cover any software engineering principles.

It will eventually, possibly: http://www.todaysengineer.org/2009/Sep/Software-PE.asp

There would still be a requirement of verifiable and documented evidence of four years of qualifying engineering experience (supervised by a PE) - so unless you've already got that under your belt right now, I would just sit tight.

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+1 -- you can't "just take the PE" but he could take the FE exam (I believe the PE requires a passing FE score anyway). – Austin Salonen Sep 30 at 15:00
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Yes, software engineers should do more Physical Education. They are usually way too fat. An exam can stimulate them to actually do something about that.

Besides, a healthy body is also good for the brain. This has been scientifically proven. Mens sana in corpore sano, and all that.

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Zing! [need 15 chars] – ojrac Sep 30 at 14:47
Hilarious, but should be a comment (not an answer). – James Jones Sep 30 at 15:47
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It may not help in the immediate future...but it definitely couldn't hurt.

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PE isn't necessarily useful in software.
But a lot of government jobs (and some large companies) require a professional for manager jobs above a certain level - I see this in my area in Canada where lots of remote sensing experts with PhDs have to be 'managed' by an engineer or a lumberjack (sorry agronomist) because physics isn't a 'profession'.

If you work for a small company without a lot of other PEs on the staff you might have difficulty keeping up the training requirements. You need a PE to sign off on your work for it to count as professional development.

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To provide a counterpoint, some day you'll run into a hiring manager who's an opinionated asshole of a CS-degree-holder, like myself, who doesn't think that software can be engineered, given the lack of a science describing it. It's something to aspire to, but nowadays it's just carpentry, unless you're talking about working at NASA.

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