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General Musings on Future Plans
#1
Forgive the rambling, but it sometimes helps to write these things down. I also like to get everyone's opinions from time to time, and the folks here have never steered me wrong when it comes to academics. Here's my quandary:

As I noted in an earlier thread, I've finished my first degree (BS in Liberal Studies). I now have 18'sh credits left on my BSGB degree. With the BSLS degree being completed, I can now prepare for my PMP exam, and I've been busy for the last few days putting together my experience portfolio. I should be done with that by next weekend, and I plan on studying for the exam and sitting it by the beginning of next month once the degree completion is verified by EC. After that's done however; I'll admit to being a bit lost.

The plan has always been to pursue a MBA after my initial degrees were done. The larger question has always been, "Where to attend?" There have been a plethora of great threads on this very subject both here and on degreeinfo.com, but as usual I like to color outside the lines.

A few qualifications:

1) I plan on retiring at 40. By retiring I mean that if I choose to work, it's because I "choose" to work. I'm looking for the educational chops to make employers sit up, take notice, and open up their wallets. It may sound trite, but money equals options, and I"m all about the options.

2) I'm also looking for something that can be accomplished reasonably quickly, since each year that passes is one year closer to my age 40 deadline (I'm 30 now). Quality shouldn't be sacrificed however; and I'm looking for a program that I can use.

3) I have no social life besides an occasional round of golf/politics and weekly paintball on Sundays for anger-management Wink The course load isn't a factor, as long as I can continue my usual work-week of 50-60 hours as well as the classes, and still keep most of my sanity.

4) I work in Cuba, and as such am faced with a variety of limitations. For example: Slow internet, so a university like Harvard or MIT which relies on video-style classes isn't much of an option for me unless I can get them on DVD. An hour of video takes me almost 12 hours to download. Sad Text based courses (Online or via books) are preferred.

5) Residencies are also a no-go, even if it's a few days every few months. The IRS would hunt me down for their money if I spent more than 30 days in the states each year.

5) As you've probably noticed by the length of this post; verbosity is a trait. Wink Some of the graduate programs are heavy on the writing in exchange for lesser group projects. Since I hate to rely on someone else for my grade; that type of course would be ideal.

So to sum up for the one or two folks that are still reading this (I'm guessing Cinderly is one of them; happily tearing apart my grammar - blasted editors!), I'm looking for suggestions. The institution should be well regarded, quickly managed with intense effort, and have a good MBA program. Price isn't that big of an issue, though if it's something along Duke's lines (100k'sh) the ROI should be of equal value. I do plan on taking the GMAT so a school requiring that is fine.

I've also been looking at overseas colleges. If I stick to the English/Scottish/German universities, then the prestige factor isn't that big of an issue. Some, like Heriot Watts offer an extremely attractive format (Testing with self study). Oxford is also attractive, as they have a distance learning program as well, and it's hard for an employer to argue with a degree from such an institution. Getting accepted would prove a challenge.

And then there's that blasted BSGS degree to finish in the next month or so...
[SIZE="2"]
-Justin
PMP, CISSP, A+, Sec+, MCDST, ITIL
Total Credits Earned: 162

www.Free-Clep-Prep.com - (with Forum Admin's permission)

[/SIZE]
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#2
Chebasaz Wrote:So to sum up for the one or two folks that are still reading this (I'm guessing Cinderly is one of them; happily tearing apart my grammar - blasted editors!), I'm looking for suggestions.

:o I actually don't tear apart grammar on message boards unless it's really, really bad and I know the person typing is a native speaker (and so should theoretically know better.) Text-speak actually grates more than the occasional typo and I know my posts aren't perfect. I have an ugly habit of leaving out articles, for instance.

If you're not looking to return to the States post-MBA, I think Heriot is a great option. I've no idea what their reputation is, here (and we probably have a slightly lower bar in Alaska than exists in the financial district in NYC.)

I've also read that more CEOs have degrees from the University of Wisconsin than Harvard, so a state school may be a good value for you. (One with a football team has higher name recognition than one without.) Here are a few US programs I've found that might meet your requirements. All are recognized names, AACSB accredited, and 2 years start to finish.

Kennesaw State's program appears to require a 2-day orientation and then no further residency. It's an 18-month program. $16,380 in tuition & fees for the program ($575 due on acceptance.)

Mississippi State offers a 8 week modules and appears to have no residency residency requirement. Tuition looks to be around $14,000 for the program, but they appear to use streaming video.

Oklahoma State offers an online MBA with flexible course options - CD Rom is listed as one of them - and I can't find a residency requirement. Non-resident tuition is steep at $34,000 for the program. At 36 - 48 hours, it can be completed in 2 years, but it might be a challenge. The flexible course format makes it worth a look, though.

Texas A&M Commerce is not the Texas A&M, but it's part of the same system. The program allows transfer of up to 12 hours of program credit. I can't easily determine the total cost, but it looks like graduate tuition is $740/hr (with distance fee.)

University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire has an all-online MBA program. 30 credits, designed to be completed in 2 years. Estimated tuition costs are $18,000.

If the five-day orientation doesn't crimp your other plans, the Arizona State University MBA is a two-year, all-online program. Also comes with a $39,000 price tag.

And, of course, talk to your target employers. HR folks are usually plenty happy to answer questions from potential employees.
BS Literature in English cum laude, Excelsior College
currently pursuing K-8 MAT, University of Alaska Southeast (42/51).

IC works! Credits by exam to date: 63

CLEP: A&I Lit (72), Am Gov (69), Biology (58), Intro to Ed Psych (73), Intro Psych (77), Intro Soc (72), US History I (69)
DSST: Astronomy (65), Civil War (63), Intro Computing (463), Environment & Humanity (70), Foundations of Ed (68), USSR (54)
GRE: Literature in English (60th percentile / 18 cr)

On Deck: classroom research & instructional design
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#3
No worries Cinderly, it's one of those "love-hate" relationships Wink I have a wonderful copy editor in Canada who chops out, with sadistic pleasure I'm sure, at least 10% of everything I send her. She works magic with readability, but I can't help cursing when I look at my wordcounts on what she sends back. :o

My thanks for the information, I'm going to spend the next few hours crawling around on the schools' websites.
[SIZE="2"]
-Justin
PMP, CISSP, A+, Sec+, MCDST, ITIL
Total Credits Earned: 162

www.Free-Clep-Prep.com - (with Forum Admin's permission)

[/SIZE]
Reply
#4
Saint Leo has an online MBA that can be accomplished in 12 months.

http://www.instantcertonline.com/forums/...-year.html
[SIZE="1"]CLEP exams passed:
Management, Accounting, Marketing, Macroeconomics, Microeconomics

DSST exams passed:
Human Resources Management, Organizational Behavior, Statistics, Management Information Systems

Earned:
B.A. in Business Administration: Technology Management from Saint Leo University

M.S. in Leadership: Business Ethics from Duquesne University [/SIZE]
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#5
Just to clarify, UW-Eau Claire is not to be confused with UW-Madison.

e.g.

Wisconsin wins more national attention for producing CEOs (Feb. 24, 2006)

Eau Claire may be a fine school - but it's no Mad-town.

Greg
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