Five Points Structural Engineers Should Know About the ASCE SEI Global Practice Guide – Ep 027
The Structural Engineering Channel - En podkast av Mathew Picardal, PE, SE & Rachel Holland, P.E. - Torsdager

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In this episode of The Structural Engineering Channel podcast, we talk to Anne Ellis, a leader in the AEC industry, about the ASCE SEI Global Practice Guide. Anne provides five very important points that structural engineers should know about this guide. The Global Practice Guide, developed by and for the structural engineering community, highlights those areas requisite for global practice that are beyond the structural engineer's domestic field of training, including culture, design, and construction as well as legal and financial issues. This Guide intends to raise awareness of — and seed inquiry into — specific topics that can provide appropriate assistance whether you are contemplating global practice, considering go-no-go decisions on specific opportunities, and/or formulating project planning. Engineering Quotes: Here Are Some of the Questions We Ask Anne in This Episode: Can you share with us some details about the career you have had so far and what you do at Ellis Global? Why do feel that the United States is a leader in structural engineering education in practice, and can you give some examples of this? What are some of the events and milestones that have led to this guide being published now? Do you have any examples of who this guide is for and what it can prevent on a global scale? Can you tell us what the ASCE SEI Global Practice Guide is and what the five most important points are that structural engineers should know about the guide? Where can structural engineers find the ASCE SEI Global Practice Guide? What is your vision for how United States-based structural engineers can have an impact on a global level beyond our borders? Do you have any tips for career guidance or paths for newer engineers who want to travel in their profession? Here Are Some of the Key Points Discussed About the ASCE SEI Global Practice Guide: Some of the big firms in the United States have experience working internationally and have shared their good and bad experiences, which contributed to this guide. This guide helps structural engineers who are working internationally to understand the technical, business, and cultural aspects of working in foreign countries. If we are not sensitive and aware of these aspects, it can inadvertently create a construct on a project that is unhealthy, unproductive, and can destroy the ability to be successful. You can find the ASCE SEI Global Practice Guide on the ASCE Structural Engineering Institute website. If you are an SCI member, you can access it for free by entering your credentials into the collaborate site. Structural engineers can have a global impact by developing their capabilities. This is accomplished by organizations like the Structural Engineering Institute and their partnership with like-minded institutes. There are many paths that can be taken by new engineers who want to work internationally. Emerging countries that are thinking of developing their infrastructure are good opportunities to follow. Volunteering for organizations like Engineers Without Borders can enable service work internationally. There are also opportunities working for the United States government on buildings or structures that they might own and operate abroad as well as working with companies that have a global footprint and are receptive to putting employees on internationally based projects. The Five Most Important Points That Structural Engineers Should Know About the Guide Are: The guide is a primer to help the structural engineer socialization in a global context. It provides you with a framework of topics that need to be considered if you are a structural engineer planning on working outside of the United States.