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Being an electrician and a EE are very different. EEs use calculus and more advanced kinds of math, and need to understand much more complicated kinds of circuitry than you'd find even wiring a factory. It really requires a college degree.

If you're good at fine work, you might be able to get a technician's job working with EEs. That's not an apprenticeship, but gives you a good idea what the job really means. The company might also have education benefits to help you move forward.

2007-11-08 01:22:45 · answer #1 · answered by Tom V 6 · 0 0

Do you mean an electrician's apprentice? Working construction, pulling wires, installing outlets, etc? That's a lot different from being an electrical engineer. To be an EE, you'll need a college degree. Pick a college or university that offers the program, and search their website to find the curriculum.

2007-11-08 00:49:03 · answer #2 · answered by Ralfcoder 7 · 0 0

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