06-27-2023, 09:33 PM
Thank you so much everybody for the insightful responses. I'm feeling very optimistic after reading all of the suggestions! I've tried to reply to everybody below:
Thank you for the advice! I realize Associate degrees aren't particularly sought after in the work force, but I figured it can't hurt and would prefer to make use of the year I already spent in college, so the classes I took don't just go to waste. One thing I'm unsure of though, what is the difference between an Associates in Science and an Associates of Applied Science? Is one better than the other? And were I to go with the Pierpont/Sophia route (which seems the most likely so far) what does it mean by area of emphasis? Would I write "AAS in Information Systems" on my resume, or "AAS with an area of emphasis in Information Systems"? Sorry I'm not very familiar with all the degrees and different versions thereof. Thank you again, very valuable information and you've given me a few goals to decide on!
Thank you! From what I've seen on the threads I've been reading, I have enough savings to go with whichever of the common paths I decide fits me best. I can devote at least 2-4 hours of study per day, which should help me breeze through Sophia courses, and I'd strongly prefer not to physically go back to school and just do everything online, so something like Pierpont sounds perfect for me.
Thank you so much for the input and motivation. I'm definitely going to look into the options suggested here but I'm leaning towards Pierpont for sure. I'll be registering with Sophia soon, and I'll remember to keep looking forward!
I'm for sure doing my best to truly learn and retain the information I'm studying from CompTIA/Coursera! I have a genuine interest in technology and I promise I'm not just looking for a shortcut to a career, only a shortcut through the tedious parts of school that I was so burned out from, and I'm very excited to see all of these options suggested to me here (especially Pierpont!). Could you expand on TADA certs? I've never heard of that before and would like to look into that as well. And of course, thank you for taking the time to respond!
100% agreed. I've read so many threads/forums on different aspects of IT and have seen tons of contradicting experiences. It's hard to figure out what to expect but I'm going to do all I can to improve. Thank you for sharing your observations!
A friend of mine is actually currently enrolled in WGU's Cloud Computing program, that's an interesting option as well and I will look into the degree pathways they provide as well. I suppose I won't know which specific field I'd like the most until I continue learning more and develop more skills in the industry. For now though Sophia courses seem like the most convenient and easy way to catch up to where I'd like to be. It's good to know that my A+ will benefit me as well. Thanks for the input and recommending WGU!
Pierpont seems to be the most common answer so far and my favorite of them all, thank you for reinforcing that! After looking back at my coursera account, it turns out I've only completed the first course in the Google IT Professional series so I haven't fully earned the certificate, but I'm seeing a lot of discussions online that claim it's very similar material to the CompTIA A+ so I'll definitely go back and complete it all to use as credits at Pierpont! Thank you for bringing that to my attention!
I totally understand, I'm looking to improve on all 3 aspects of your trifecta; CompTIA/Coursera for certs, finishing my Associates Degree for now before going further, and gaining some experience in an entry level role once I find one. I figured getting the A+ would be enough to land a Help Desk position or equivalent, but I've also read plenty of unlucky experiences where people were struggling to land interviews. Hopefully obtaining the AAS in Information Systems will add just the slightest boost to my chances and I'll find a good position more quickly. Thanks for taking the time to contribute!
Thank you for the recommendation! Pierpont seems like the best option for now and the most popular suggestion, which I believe I'll be starting on soon.
(06-24-2023, 02:11 PM)rachel83az Wrote: Associate degrees aren't usually that much cheaper or faster than the Bachelor's degrees we recommend here. They're also often not very much use for employment. However, because you're in the US, your age, and your prior college credits, you could get the FREE Pierpont BOG AAS with an Area of Emphasis in Information Systems. https://degreeforum.miraheze.org/wiki/Pierpont_C%26TC Instead of CLEP, I would strongly recommend utilizing Sophia.org. It costs $99/mo. and you're allowed to complete as many credits as you're able to in that time. Depending on how much time you have to devote to this, you could get sufficient Sophia credits to get the Pierpont degree in 1-2 months.
Thank you for the advice! I realize Associate degrees aren't particularly sought after in the work force, but I figured it can't hurt and would prefer to make use of the year I already spent in college, so the classes I took don't just go to waste. One thing I'm unsure of though, what is the difference between an Associates in Science and an Associates of Applied Science? Is one better than the other? And were I to go with the Pierpont/Sophia route (which seems the most likely so far) what does it mean by area of emphasis? Would I write "AAS in Information Systems" on my resume, or "AAS with an area of emphasis in Information Systems"? Sorry I'm not very familiar with all the degrees and different versions thereof. Thank you again, very valuable information and you've given me a few goals to decide on!
(06-24-2023, 05:21 PM)bjcheung77 Wrote: @Alec311, Welcome to the board, you've done the template but missed the last post addendum. The more details on your budget, commitments, study habits and so on would give us a clearer picture of your situation. It really depends on what you're looking at, if you're looking to finish your Associates at the current school, see if they take CLEP or ACE alternative credits and what their residency requirements are, most schools just need 15 out of 60 credits for their Associates and you have 24 already, you can finish it by CLEPing the rest if they allow and your courses/exams hit all the spots, then ladder up to a Bachelors.
Thank you! From what I've seen on the threads I've been reading, I have enough savings to go with whichever of the common paths I decide fits me best. I can devote at least 2-4 hours of study per day, which should help me breeze through Sophia courses, and I'd strongly prefer not to physically go back to school and just do everything online, so something like Pierpont sounds perfect for me.
(06-24-2023, 10:19 PM)Insert Name Wrote: If you go with Purdue or somewhere else, it’s going to be a similar game plan. The trick is to just start the process, and keep checking your plan to see what can overlap and what is time sensitive. Example being start doing the Sophia classes you know you need, while you’re waiting on transcript evaluations. And keep your head up, and steps forward. I’ve seen people start to get down because they hit a month or two that seem slow, and had to remind them that the two months prior to that they knocked out the equivalent of a year and a half worth of work at a traditional school.
Thank you so much for the input and motivation. I'm definitely going to look into the options suggested here but I'm leaning towards Pierpont for sure. I'll be registering with Sophia soon, and I'll remember to keep looking forward!
(06-25-2023, 01:01 AM)bjcheung77 Wrote: @Alec311, you're a little more than two decades younger than I. You should really take your time to 'learn' what you're looking at and focus on three things I recommend, certs, degree, experience. This is my suggestion, Coursera/TADA plus Sophia.org to get all the requirements for Pierpont BOG AAS and UMPI 90 credits max transfer.
If you're not able to get the CLEP/ACE credits towards your local CC associates degree, then shoot for the Pierpont BOG AAS with an Info Systems emphasis by taking Coursera/TADA certs (any one of them that is wroth credit and also gets you some entry level experience/knowledge), Sophia.org transfer to UMPI for the BABA PM&IS.
I'm for sure doing my best to truly learn and retain the information I'm studying from CompTIA/Coursera! I have a genuine interest in technology and I promise I'm not just looking for a shortcut to a career, only a shortcut through the tedious parts of school that I was so burned out from, and I'm very excited to see all of these options suggested to me here (especially Pierpont!). Could you expand on TADA certs? I've never heard of that before and would like to look into that as well. And of course, thank you for taking the time to respond!
(06-25-2023, 01:54 AM)Insert Name Wrote: Talking to IT with our company, IT world seems kinda like an odd space to me. They seem all about “what do you know, and what certs do you have?” Like, none of them that I’ve talked to have degrees in anything. Some were like “I took an IT class in CC once, got this job, now they signed me up for a Cisco cert class but I keep missing it.” Like, it seems like if someone sped rushed a degree and took their time and learned the info from some good cert courses AND put the info to practice after the classes to retain the knowledge, they’d be IT king/queen!
That’s just my observation from the outside looking in.
100% agreed. I've read so many threads/forums on different aspects of IT and have seen tons of contradicting experiences. It's hard to figure out what to expect but I'm going to do all I can to improve. Thank you for sharing your observations!
(06-25-2023, 12:13 PM)dfrecore Wrote: If you really want to work in IT, then a degree from WGU will be your best bet - you'll get a bunch of certs along the way. There are lots of options from which to choose, so you can really focus on the area you like best (networking, cloud, cybersec, data analytics, etc.).
Since you don't have a ton of credits, and some will count in the GE area, you won't "lose" a ton of credits. The A+ cert will actually count as 6cr in two of the harder/more time consuming courses (IT-Foundations and IT-Applications), so you're kind of ahead there.
Also, for someone just starting out, WGU will get you towards where you want to go more quickly than most of the other degrees I think. All of those certs will be awesome (and "free").
A friend of mine is actually currently enrolled in WGU's Cloud Computing program, that's an interesting option as well and I will look into the degree pathways they provide as well. I suppose I won't know which specific field I'd like the most until I continue learning more and develop more skills in the industry. For now though Sophia courses seem like the most convenient and easy way to catch up to where I'd like to be. It's good to know that my A+ will benefit me as well. Thanks for the input and recommending WGU!
(06-25-2023, 04:49 PM)LevelUP Wrote: A quick and free Associates degree would be the Pierpont BOG AAS with an Area of Emphasis in Information Systems
https://degreeforum.miraheze.org/wiki/Pi...egree_Plan
Your Google IT support cert brings in 12 credits, so you are 36 of 60 done. I would do the rest with Sophia finishing out the general education and taking IT-related courses such as Intro to IT, Web, DB, Python.
https://www.sophia.org/
Pierpont seems to be the most common answer so far and my favorite of them all, thank you for reinforcing that! After looking back at my coursera account, it turns out I've only completed the first course in the Google IT Professional series so I haven't fully earned the certificate, but I'm seeing a lot of discussions online that claim it's very similar material to the CompTIA A+ so I'll definitely go back and complete it all to use as credits at Pierpont! Thank you for bringing that to my attention!
(06-25-2023, 11:22 PM)bjcheung77 Wrote: @Alec311, Everyone will have different views on how to do things, you can decide what you want to do. Generally, I would go with the trifecta of Certs, Degree, Experience. Basically... If you're trying to break into IT, the Associates should be enough along with the Coursera/TADA certificate offerings as it will give you some experience in those subjects along the way.
I totally understand, I'm looking to improve on all 3 aspects of your trifecta; CompTIA/Coursera for certs, finishing my Associates Degree for now before going further, and gaining some experience in an entry level role once I find one. I figured getting the A+ would be enough to land a Help Desk position or equivalent, but I've also read plenty of unlucky experiences where people were struggling to land interviews. Hopefully obtaining the AAS in Information Systems will add just the slightest boost to my chances and I'll find a good position more quickly. Thanks for taking the time to contribute!
(06-26-2023, 07:33 AM)allvia Wrote: I second this recommendation as a start. It gives you an associate degree (quick and cheaply), and you gain the Google IT certificate to add to your resume.
Thank you for the recommendation! Pierpont seems like the best option for now and the most popular suggestion, which I believe I'll be starting on soon.