Hello,
I am going into my junior year of electrical and computer engineering with no internship experience related to my degree. I am becoming very worried about how I will fare against competition due to having no relevant work experience in electrical engineering. I was wondering if anybody here has any tips on how I could improve my chances of landing an internship next summer. I currently have several ideas, but just wanted outside opinions from people who may be more experienced than me. My current plan is to take online courses to improve technical knowledge or to start a personal project.
If I hope on going into a career in hardware engineering, what online course topics would be most helpful? And also if there are any other suggestions for improving my resume and skills I would greatly appreciate it. Thank you!
The most important thing is to be able to earnestly show that you are passionate about electrical engineering and willing to learn and humbly take instruction from your mentors.
A big question on your mind should be what the mentoring situation is at your prospective employer, i.e. who you will be working for and what they do. Asking about this is a good thing.
You are not expected to come in with experience. You are expected to come in with passion, focus, and humility(i.e. an open mind; without a chip on your shoulder).
The field is far too broad for many to know what area they want to end up in. Instead, you should focus on a few areas, and endeavor to get an internship in one of these areas. Why are you interviewing with us? "Because I would like to get experience with x area working under a mentor and learn as much as I can".
Don't overdo your resume, without an internship it must be no more than one page.
Don't talk about MS office type stuff, that goes without saying.
Show passion, interest, dress professionally, and come in with thoughtful questions and you will be fine.
Make sure you can derive your basic formulas such as fundamental op amp circuits, BJT's, diodes, etc. Depending on what type of company you are interviewing with, you may have a significant techincal interview. For an intern, this technical interview is not so much to guage the precision of what you remember, but to guage your thought process. You can pass the technical interview without getting a single question right.
Do NOT be afraid to go all the way across the country for the right internship. No matter how terrifying this seems, it is worth it. By far. And most companies will help you through every step of the process if they make you an offer.
Good luck.