How can I Learn to Be a Studio Engineer?
The simplest way to learn to be a studio engineer is to simply find a school that teaches the technical side of the music industry and go through the program. This is, however, perhaps easier said than done. For starters, you need to be properly equipped with the knowledge you need to even choose a good school to attend. When you are looking at schools keep in mind what sort of program would best serve your needs. If you have other responsibilities such as family, work, or other classes then you need to choose a school that you can work into your life.
Similarly, you may want to consider what style of education will work best with how you learn. For example, if you have learned well in the traditional setting of a single teacher and a large class with many students all vying for time, then perhaps further classes of that type would work well for you. If, instead you have found yourself frustrated or ignored in those types of classes then you might be best served by a non-traditional program such as the mentor-apprentice method offered by more schools over the last few decades. To learn to be a studio engineer you need to be sure that the program you invest your time and money into will really serve your needs, and many people find that having a personal mentor who works in the industry to teach them with firsthand knowledge and real world experience is more beneficial than classroom settings. Only you can know how you will learn best, but you owe it to yourself to at least consider what options and alternatives you might have that you may have never even known were out there.
Once your education is complete, however, there is of course the actual process of finding work in a studio. For this you will need to live somewhere that gives you the opportunity to actually do the work you want to do. In other words, if you live in a city or state that is nowhere near any of the work done by the record industry you might find you need to move somewhere else. If this is a reality for you, then consider looking at schools in those other areas before you even begin your education. After all, it could be easier for you to uproot your life now and receive your education in an area where you will be able to find work after you finish your schooling; rather than going to school to learn to be a studio engineer and then needing to move somewhere to find work.

