Civil Engineering Technicians

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Summary

Civil engineering technicians
Civil engineering technicians read and review project blueprints to determine dimensions of structures.
Quick Facts: Civil Engineering Technicians
2010 Median Pay $46,290 per year
$22.26 per hour
Entry-Level Education Associate’s degree
Work Experience in a Related Occupation None
On-the-job Training None
Number of Jobs, 2010 79,000
Job Outlook, 2010-20 12% (About as fast as average)
Employment Change, 2010-20 9,400

What Civil Engineering Technicians Do

Civil engineering technicians help civil engineers plan and design the construction of highways, bridges, utilities, and other major infrastructure projects. They also help with commercial, residential, and land development. Civil engineering technicians work under the direction of a licensed civil engineer.

Work Environment

Civil engineering technicians work in offices where they help civil engineers plan and design projects. Civil engineering technicians sometimes visit the job site where a construction project is taking place to test materials or inspect the project.

How to Become a Civil Engineering Technician

Although not always required, an associate’s degree in civil engineering technology is preferred for civil engineering technicians.

Pay

The median annual wage for civil engineering technicians was $46,290 in May 2010.

Job Outlook

Employment of civil engineering technicians is expected to grow 12 percent from 2010 to 2020, about as fast as the average for all occupations. The need to maintain and repair an aging infrastructure will sustain demand for civil engineering technicians.

Similar Occupations

Compare the job duties, education, job growth, and pay of civil engineering technicians with similar occupations.

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Contacts for More Information

Learn more about civil engineering technicians by contacting these additional resources.

What Civil Engineering Technicians Do About this section

Civil engineering technicians
Civil engineering technicians confer with project supervisors to determine details of a project.

Civil engineering technicians help civil engineers plan and design the construction of highways, bridges, utilities, and other major infrastructure projects. They also help with commercial, residential, and land development.

Duties

Civil engineering technicians typically do the following:

  • Read and review project blueprints to determine dimensions of structures
  • Confer with their supervisors about preparing plans and evaluating field conditions
  • Inspect project sites and evaluate contractors’ work to detect problems with a design
  • Help to ensure that projects conform to design specifications and applicable codes
  • Develop plans and estimate costs for installing systems and operating facilities
  • Prepare reports and document project activities and data

Civil engineering technicians must work under the direction of a licensed civil engineer. For more information, see the profile on civil engineers.

Civil engineering technicians generally help civil engineers, often doing many of the same tasks as the engineers. However, because they are not licensed, civil engineering technicians cannot approve designs or supervise the overall project.

These technicians sometimes estimate construction costs and specify the materials to be used. Other times, they prepare drawings or survey land. Civil engineering technicians may also set up and monitor various instruments for studies of traffic conditions.

Work Environment About this section

Civil engineering technicians
Civil engineering technicians work on-site to help civil engineers in implementing project plans correctly.

Civil engineering technicians held about 79,000 jobs in 2010.

Civil engineering technicians work in offices where they help civil engineers plan and design projects. They work primarily in architectural and engineering industries, and in federal, state, and local governments:

Architectural, engineering, and related services44%
State government, excluding education and hospitals29
Local government, excluding education and hospitals18

Civil engineering technicians sometimes visit the job site where a construction project is taking place to test materials or inspect the project. They do this to help ensure that the designs approved by the licensed civil engineer are being carried out correctly.

How to Become a Civil Engineering Technician About this section

Civil engineering technicians
Civil engineering technicians prepare reports and document project activities and data.

Although not always required, an associate’s degree in civil engineering technology is preferred for civil engineering technicians. It is best to seek programs that ABET (formerly the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology) has certified.

Education and Training

Prospective civil engineering technicians should take as many high school science and math courses as possible to prepare for programs in engineering technology after high school.

Employers generally want engineering technicians to have an associate’s degree from an ABET-accredited program, although the degree is not always required. Engineering technology programs are also available at technical or vocational schools that award a postgraduate certificate or diploma.

Courses at technical or vocational schools may include engineering, design, and computer software. To complete an associate’s degree in civil engineering technology, students also usually need to take other courses in liberal arts and the sciences.

Workers with less formal engineering technology training need to learn some skills on the job.

In contrast to civil engineering technicians, civil engineering technologists need a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering technology to master and apply high-level principles of civil engineering in their work.

Important Qualities

Critical-thinking skills. Civil engineering technicians, as assistants to civil engineers, must help the engineers spot problems to avoid wasting time, effort, and funds.

Math skills. Civil engineering technicians use mathematics for analysis, design, and troubleshooting in their work.

Monitoring skills. Civil engineering technicians sometimes have to go to job sites and assess a project for the engineer. Therefore, they must know what to look for and how best to report back to the engineer overseeing the project.

Prioritizing skills. Pressures from deadlines mean that technicians must quickly see which types of information are most important.

Problem-solving skills. Like civil engineers, civil engineering technicians help design projects to solve a particular problem. Technicians must be able to understand and work with all the related systems involved in building a project.

Reading skills. Civil engineering technicians carry out plans and designs for projects that a civil engineer has approved. They must be able to understand all the reports about these designs.

Writing skills. Civil engineering technicians are often asked to relay their findings in writing. The reports must be well organized and clearly written.

Certification

Certification is not needed to enter this occupation, but it can help technicians advance their careers. The National Institute for Certification in Engineering Technologies (NICET) is one of the primary organizations overseeing certification for civil engineering technicians.

Certification as a technician requires an exam and documentation, including a work history, recommendations, and, for most programs, supervisor verification of specific experience.

Certification as a technologist requires a bachelor’s degree in engineering technology. There is no additional exam for basic engineering technologist certification, but documentation, including a work history and endorsements, is required for advanced levels.

NICET requires technicians and technologists to update their skills and knowledge through a recertification process that encourages continuing professional development.

Advancement

Civil engineering technicians can advance in their careers by learning to design systems for a variety of projects, such as storm sewers and sanitary systems. It is also useful for civil engineering technicians to become proficient at reading graphic plans of proposed utility projects, called profiles.

Pay About this section

Civil Engineering Technicians

Median annual wages, May 2010

Engineering Technicians, Except Drafters

$51,930

Civil Engineering Technicians

$46,290

Total, All Occupations

$33,840

 

The median annual wage of civil engineering technicians was $46,290 in May 2010. The median wage is the wage at which half the workers in an occupation earned more than that amount and half earned less. The lowest 10 percent earned less than $29,060, and the top 10 percent earned more than $70,450.

Median annual wages in industries employing the largest numbers of civil engineering technicians in May 2010 were as follows:

Local government, excluding education and hospitals$53,100
Architectural, engineering, and related services45,630
State government, excluding education and hospitals42,320

Job Outlook About this section

Civil Engineering Technicians

Percent change in employment, projected 2010-20

Total, All Occupations

14%

Civil Engineering Technicians

12%

Engineering Technicians, Except Drafters

5%

 

Employment of civil engineering technicians is expected to grow 12 percent from 2010 to 2020, about as fast as the average for all occupations.

The need to maintain and repair the country’s infrastructure continues to increase: bridges need rebuilding, roads need maintaining, and levees and dams need upgrading. Moreover, a growing population means that water systems must be maintained to reduce or eliminate loss of drinkable water. Additionally, more waste treatment plants will be needed to help clean the nation’s waterways. Civil engineers must plan, design, and oversee this work, and civil engineering technicians will be needed to help the engineers.

State and local governments will likely continue to face fiscal challenges over the decade, restricting their ability to fund all the projects that need attention. Eventually, however, infrastructure repairs and replacements will have to be made.

Job Prospects

Civil engineering technicians learn to use design software that civil engineers typically do not. Thus, those who master it, keep their skills current, and stay abreast of the latest software will likely improve their chances for employment.

Employment projections data for civil engineering technicians, 2010-20
Occupational Title SOC Code Employment, 2010 Projected Employment, 2020 Change, 2010-20 Employment by Industry
Percent Numeric

SOURCE: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employment Projections program

Civil Engineering Technicians

17-3022 79,000 88,500 12 9,400 [XLS]

Similar Occupations About this section

This table shows a list of occupations with job duties that are similar to those of civil engineering technicians.

Occupation Job Duties ENTRY-LEVEL EDUCATION Help 2010 MEDIAN PAY Help
Civil engineers

Civil Engineers

Civil engineers design and supervise large construction projects, including roads, buildings, airports, tunnels, dams, bridges, and systems for water supply and sewage treatment.

Bachelor’s degree $77,560
Drafters

Drafters

Drafters use software to convert the designs of engineers and architects into technical drawings and plans. Workers in production and construction use these plans to build everything from microchips to skyscrapers.

Associate’s degree $47,880
Surveying and mapping technicians

Surveying and Mapping Technicians

Surveying and mapping technicians assist surveyors and cartographers in collecting data and making maps of the earth’s surface. Surveying technicians visit sites to take measurements of the land. Mapping technicians use geographic data to create maps.

High school diploma or equivalent $37,900
Surveyors

Surveyors

Surveyors establish official land, airspace, and water boundaries. Surveyors work with civil engineers, landscape architects, and urban and regional planners to develop comprehensive design documents.

Bachelor’s degree $54,880
Suggested citation:

Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2012-13 Edition, Civil Engineering Technicians,
on the Internet at http://www.bls.gov/ooh/architecture-and-engineering/civil-engineering-technicians.htm (visited September 16, 2012).

Publish Date: Thursday, March 29, 2012