Saturday, May 3, 2014

Steps To Being A Professional Land Surveyor

By Tracie Knight


Land survey is the very precise science of establishing boundaries, lines, and corners of the physical earth. In topography, it is used for determining elevation points and landscape features for general mapping purposes. It can also be a detailed inspection of a physical property that is being transferred from one owner to another, as in acquiring a titled land.

There are many people who are in need of the services a surveyor can provide. Some of these include construction and mining companies, professional survey companies. Real estate developers also work closely with an Alberta land surveyor, and his or her services can be employed by the federal, provincial, and municipal governments. If you do not like to work for an employer, you can also be self-employed.

To qualify, an aspiring surveyor must possess excellent mathematical skills. Since your work with require measurements, you must be fairly good with numbers. You must also have a profound understanding of subjects related to this profession such as geometry, trigonometry, algebra, computer and even drafting. Aside from these you must also have excellent organizational skills.

You must also be endowed with the uncanny ability to visualize land distances, sizes and objects. A strong attention to detail coupled with saint like patience could be one of your arsenal. You must also learn to communicate well and work closely with a group of other people since a surveyor is usually part of a large team.

Aside from the physical and intellectual abilities, to become a professional you should aim for a diploma. Choose a university that has good reputation because it will give you an edge when you enter the world of work. Take up land surveying. That, or become an engineer. You can also be enrolled in closely related fields like geomantics and spatial sciences.

A college degree in engineering is an educational must for someone who wants to be a land surveyor. Some colleges even offer courses that focus entirely on surveying. Related courses such as geomatics and spatial sciences are also accepted. After obtaining a degree you must sit through a series of examinations for surveyors. Most battery of tests begin with the Fundamentals of Survey exam and finally ends with the state licensing exam.

The internship period varies on different states, some up to four long years. Apply for an internship that is closest to your interest since surveying can be quite broad. As an intern, you will be working under the supervision of a certified licensed professional who will evaluate your performances.

After your internship you will be required to take up another exam, which is the Practice and Surveying Exam. After you pass this one, the next examination is already the final licensure exams administered by the National Council of Examiners for Engineering and Surveying. You will need to review and prepare both mental and physical faculties in order to pass this one an obtain a license.

Upon becoming a professional in the field you have chosen, it is now time to apply all that you have learned during your college days and your intern years. An entry level surveyor makes twenty two thousand dollars annually. Stack up on experiences because an experienced worker can make up to thirty thousand dollars. This more or less compensates for all you have been through.




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