<p>Can someone who has participated in this program please give me a brief explanation on what you do in that club? I checked out the website already, but it did not provide me with the information I wanted. One of my friends told me that you just take a test about finding solutions to hypothetical engineering problems? Is this true, can anyone expand? Thanks :]</p>
<p>Well, your friend was right - it’s a test and you solve problems with your group. A couple years ago, it was about designing a theme park. They asked questions and you had to do various calculations, relating to mostly chem and physics. It wasn’t like ‘design a roller coaster’ it was like ‘given these parameters what is the maximum height this hill could be’. You get to bring textbooks and things too, it’s not solving stuff from memory.</p>
<p>A terrible NFL team.</p>
<p>My son signed up and used The JETS PathAssess available on the website. It’s similar to the Holland Interest Inventory and other career assessment tools. We thought it would have more specific information or more in depth matching to Engineering careers. Instead it was very perfunctory and thus not very useful for identifying different engineering disciplines that might suit your interests. Save the 12 or 13 bucks.</p>
<p>I don’t anything about the JETS competition program itself. It looks great, but my son’s school doesn’t participate.</p>
<p>I thought JETS is Junior Engineering Technical Society. [Junior</a> Engineering Technical Society (JETS): Experience](<a href=“http://www.jets.org/]Junior”>http://www.jets.org/)
My son is the president of the club in his high school. They organize teams to participate science competition like Science Olympiads, TEAMS and Robotics competition. It is like a science club.</p>