Career Colleges » Nevada » Trades and Careers » Surveying
Looking for accredited career colleges, technical schools, and universities in Nevada offering Surveying degrees. Surveying is part of the civil engineering practice. Surveyors are important to construction, as well.
The experience you are likely to have going to college in Nevada is as widely varied as the state itself. The mining towns of Eastern Nevada, such as Battle Mountain, Winnemucca and Elko, offer career experience in the resource extraction industry. Then there are the gambling towns of Reno and Las Vegas, which could not be more different from one another. Despite the widespread casinos and their associated nightlife, Reno is an established city with a real down-home feel. Reno has strong community organizations, and a small but hardy arts scene. Las Vegas is, to some, the Eighth Wonder of the World. This is a 24-hour city with world-class opportunities in the fields of entertainment and hospitality. Or perhaps you will be drawn to the serene desert life in the largely empty parts of Nevada between these cities.Surveyors make precise measurements to determine property boundaries. They provide data relevant to the shape and contour of the Earth?s surface for engineering, mapmaking, and construction projects.
Surveyors typically need a bachelor?s degree. Before working on their own, surveyors must be licensed by the states where they practice before they can certify legal documents and provide surveying services to the public.
Surveyors held nearly 40,190 jobs in the United States in 2012, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (www.bls.gov). The rate of job growth for surveyors is expected to be 25% between 2010 and 2020, which is faster than the average job growth rate. In 2012, the median annual wages for surveyors were about $56,230.