In my opinion, twenty four hours in three years is absolutely shocking! Hopefully you have read my original post in this thread Tom. Not only do I see graduates that have no clue practically, I have also seen unpaid 'employees' that are with a race team in order to gain experience soon throw the towel in and fall to bits once a bit of pressure is laid on them and they are expected to perform to the same level as a paid employee. (Begging the question do they want the experience or not?!) Their attitude soon turns from one of "I'm gonna work like a dog to impress these guys so that hopefully they will give me a job" to "Well I'm not getting paid so I'm gonna drag my feet and not give a ---."Tom wrote: I completely disagree, I'm doing Motorsport Technology at Oxford Brookes (supposed to be a little more hands on than engineering) and throughout our entire course (3 years) we get 24 hours of practical work, and its such incredibly basic stuff too. I don't know how outside companyies view it but I don't think we get nearly enough prac, to the extent my mate on the course couldn't change his starter motor last week without calling out a mechanic. Maybe this is a rare thing but to be a good engineer both aspects must be fully understood and I think that's where a lot of people fall.
My other work placement gripe is people that go into a job bull shitting and making out they know it all already. You will soon get found out... fast!