ME's at my place of work spend probably 70% of the time doing paperwork and the rest for design. We are regulated by the FDA and TUV so we have a lot of paperwork to do. I work for a medical company.
The amount of CAD work you have also depends a lot on how your future employer categorizes responsibilities in the development process. If you want to be a CAD user the majority of the day, I would stay away from the ME role (at least where I work) and go for the AA in Drafting/Design. Get your foot in the door of a good company upon completion and try it out for a while to make sure you want this to be your career. Then you could go back if you wanted and get your BS (hopefully your employer will pay for that). I know a few designers that make just as much on a AA as some engineers make with a BS. No BS.
The amount of CAD work you have also depends a lot on how your future employer categorizes responsibilities in the development process. If you want to be a CAD user the majority of the day, I would stay away from the ME role (at least where I work) and go for the AA in Drafting/Design. Get your foot in the door of a good company upon completion and try it out for a while to make sure you want this to be your career. Then you could go back if you wanted and get your BS (hopefully your employer will pay for that). I know a few designers that make just as much on a AA as some engineers make with a BS. No BS.
Originally posted by 5Toes
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