 At Griffith our engineering degrees are focused on producing graduates who are job ready. We introduce them to practical skills early and strongly all throughout the course. Our new program in electronic and UAV engineering is preparing graduates for the exciting new area that is UAV or unmanned aerial vehicle technology. Our program is a core program in electronic engineering but it gives specialisation in aviation, avionics, UAV design and our students also gain their remote pilot's license because if they're going to design UAVs they need to be able to testify them as well. In the electrical engineering program we have a combination of computing with electric circuits with transformers, with motors, with generators, with all of the hardware that runs on electrical systems today. So it goes from cell phones, solar energy and renewable resources that replace fossil fuels and give us less global warming. I'm currently working as a firmware design engineer for a Korean based electronics company. What I enjoyed most was probably working alongside some of the fantastic Griffith University staff who are very kind and dedicated to help you become the best engineer you can be. As you can see everything is very experimental, we learn by doing this. That helps us understand things 10 times better than reading a book. So the theory is also taught but it is implemented through a lot of experimental design as well. We prepare students in their theory and our program has a whole trimester of industry placement. So our students will be going out into industry and actually working and getting practical experience before they actually graduate. There are formal prerequisites for coming into the engineering degrees and those are Maths B in Queensland and English. If you want to come in with more strength try Maths C and do physics. Griffith has enabled me to become a world-class engineer by providing me a supportive academic environment and giving me the platform and the resources to learn and grow and become a real engineer.