>>584113uhm ... EE and electrician work are two fairly different career paths.
24 volts is "high voltage" in my world. Most of the time I'm dealing with 5 or 3.3 (or even less) and turning it on and off really fast.
Fair amount of math involved... calculus, trig, statistics... even more programming though. You're not going to sit down and derive a function, but you will need to know how to take a data set from a sensor or microprocessor and transform it into something useable.
Engineering's more about being able to figure things out than math, but engineers use math/physics to figure shit out and answer questions.
Power generation/transmission is still "electrical engineering", just a different career. Still dealing with a lot of the same stuff (inductance, capacitance) just on a significantly larger scale.
Automotive is another world.
Robotics/industrial automation's another thing.
Medical business is ... a business i'm glad i'm not in.
Aerospace guys have to deal with radiation effects and extreme reliability.