Aerospace

<p>Is Aerospace Engineering making a comeback?</p>

<p>Do people still fly on planes?</p>

<p>It will always have ups and downs. Right now is a down period, but there most certainly will be better days.</p>

<p>The job market is there if you are qualified and look for it.</p>

<p>Well, if by now you already got your degree in Aerospace Engineering, you certainly can apply a job at Boeing to fix their Boeing 787 Dreamliners…</p>

<p>Anyhow who actually will fix 787’s lithium ion battery? is it the EE guy, ChemE or Aerospace Eng. person?..just wondering…</p>

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Depends what is wrong with it. Chances are there are plenty of problems that plenty of different engineers will have to work together to solve.</p>

<p>If you graduate from one of the top aerospace engineering schools (MIT, UMich, CalTech) is it still possible to work for a company like NASA or Boeing?</p>

<p>Boeing hires several kinds of engineers - not just aerospace - and doesn’t limit itself to “top schools” - but what things will be like in four years is hard to predict. Seattleite here - have seen the boom years of hiring like crazy, and the massive layoffs.</p>

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<p>This is worded very oddly. Would you still be able to? Of course! Like AmicaMom said, though, Boeing and NASA hire large numbers of engineers from all different engineering disciplines and from a variety of schools.</p>