I ran across this article on Twitter. Although it is written in a more "rant" style of blog post there are many interesting points and it really got me thinking.
Personally, I have always hated the title "intern". It automatically places you at the bottom of the totem pole in almost any situation. Additionally, it does not give credit to the amount of work an intern completes or the value the intern adds to the project. This got me thinking about what BIM (in my case, Revit) has done to the role of the intern.
I began my "intern career" using AutoCAD and ended it using Revit. In most cases the responsibilities of 2D documentation have not changed from the AutoCAD Intern to the BIM Intern..."BIMtern"??... So what has BIM done for the intern?
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Personally, I have always hated the title "intern". It automatically places you at the bottom of the totem pole in almost any situation. Additionally, it does not give credit to the amount of work an intern completes or the value the intern adds to the project. This got me thinking about what BIM (in my case, Revit) has done to the role of the intern.
I began my "intern career" using AutoCAD and ended it using Revit. In most cases the responsibilities of 2D documentation have not changed from the AutoCAD Intern to the BIM Intern..."BIMtern"??... So what has BIM done for the intern?
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