My Professional Goals

Degree

Like I said in the academics page, I need a bachelors degree in science/engineering to be able to even become an aerospace engineer so my first goal is to successfully get that degree. Spend the four years in college and dont give up on it, in order to be able to do my job, that is my goal for the degree part of the job.

Joshua Hoehne. "Blue and white academic hat" May 20, 2020. Unsplash.com. https://unsplash.com/photos/blue-and-white-academic-hat-iggWDxHTAUQ

Job Training

After college I am not allowed to go straight into the job, I still need proper real experience training to be able to get it. So my next goal for my profession is, right after college go and find a place that allows for aerospace engineer training, that way I can work my way up to the best I can be.

Actual Job

Finding the job

Once my training is finished I will be completely eligible to be an actual aerospace engineer, but then I need to start looking for a job site or company where someone will hire me. This ties into one of my goals to either work at Nasa and on Space ships, or for a plane manufactoring company to engineer planes, like Boeing.

Rocketship launching Jet flying through the air
Bill Jelen. "The first launch of the SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket" Febuary 11 2018. Unsplash.com. https://unsplash.com/photos/space-shuttle-woWf_VJ7dNs
C joyful. "A jet aircraft soars through the cloudy sky". April 7 2025. Unsplash.com. https://unsplash.com/photos/a-jet-aircraft-soars-through-the-cloudy-sky-VD32OP6mEOI

My pay

The average pay of an aerospace engineer is $134,840 a year, but my goal for myself is to do it long enough and be good enough to have a higher pay grade, I want to push to try to get above $200,000 a year, which not a lot of people get, although it is still possible.