CEng qualified Civil Engineer with 20 years experience, took 8 years part time study to get to that level, started working for a design consultant when i left school as a tea boy/ drawing folder!
Find it very degrading to say the least that absolutely anyone can call themselves an engineer.
Call yourself a doctor or teacher if you aren't one and see how far you get!
I think the governing bodies are mostly to blame as very little is done to enforce a standard of knowledge level before a title is awarded
just my 2p.
The 'technicians' we recruit have to be eligible for enrolement on the Clinical Technologists register, and to do that they need a degree. The aim is for them to become Chartered members of IPEM. We set a minimum requirement of a HNC, and then continue their development down whatever route is best suited to them and the business. Some will do a number of IT/CISCO/SQL server courses, whilst others will do degrees in electronics/computing/business/MBA. Some stay at HNC level, albeit with a multitude of product and soft skill courses added.
An outside observer might suggest that you change the practical exam.
If 95% of those that take the exam fail it, you may need to look at how you ask the question in order to make it clear as to what you are looking for people to do.
The practical exam contains far more than wiring a plug. There's electronics/pneumatics/IT elements to it. What we're looking for with the plug test is for them to listen, they're told to read the instructions, and then do it.
As a Chartered Civil Engineer I couldn't agree more. The role described by the OP is an electrician. Some may find that insulting but no more insulting than calling him an engineer.
I'd interested to see an electrician with a networked intensive care ventilator in bits. The test equipment alone is worth more the the car they drive around in. The flow rates, volumes and pressures delivered to a baby weighing less than a bag of sugar have to be phenominally accurate, and the delivery system to achieve that isn't a bicycle pump...
I have a HNC in electronics, and a degree in mgt science. I don't consider myself to be an engineer but I do consider many of my staff to be engineers. However, the point of the post was to highlight how many ENGINEERS can't follow instructions and wire a plug - probably beneath them.