07-26-2022, 02:28 PM
Hello,
I'm well into my tech career. I managed to break in and acheive a high level without a degree including having held a Principal Lead title at a multi-thousand international software company. I've also had management titles at various points in my career, but am back to being an IC by choice. I've saved my nest egg, and now I'm looking at what I want my passion career to be.
My current dream is to move to Spain as an English teacher. My understanding from my Google research is that being a native US english speaker, having my BA, and obtaining a language teaching certificate should make me an attractive candidate. A bachelor's seems necessary if I want to get in on a student teaching visa program with one of the regional education authorities out there. VISA requirements make employment harder for US citizens out there, but I'm not sure how much Brexit has opened the playing field for us in relative competitiveness. I also imagine my tech background will make me an uniquely qualified candidate for some more specialized adult teaching roles, but I haven't researched that yet. Unforunately, I don't have the degree (nor the certificate, but I'm less worried about that). That is where I think UMPI and the resources here can help!
I have some college credits from ~15 years ago at well established, regionally accredited, brick and mortar junior colleges in my local area that still operate and maintain their accreditations.
Plan Spreadsheet
My main questions:
Skills/capacity summary:
I'm well into my tech career. I managed to break in and acheive a high level without a degree including having held a Principal Lead title at a multi-thousand international software company. I've also had management titles at various points in my career, but am back to being an IC by choice. I've saved my nest egg, and now I'm looking at what I want my passion career to be.
My current dream is to move to Spain as an English teacher. My understanding from my Google research is that being a native US english speaker, having my BA, and obtaining a language teaching certificate should make me an attractive candidate. A bachelor's seems necessary if I want to get in on a student teaching visa program with one of the regional education authorities out there. VISA requirements make employment harder for US citizens out there, but I'm not sure how much Brexit has opened the playing field for us in relative competitiveness. I also imagine my tech background will make me an uniquely qualified candidate for some more specialized adult teaching roles, but I haven't researched that yet. Unforunately, I don't have the degree (nor the certificate, but I'm less worried about that). That is where I think UMPI and the resources here can help!
I have some college credits from ~15 years ago at well established, regionally accredited, brick and mortar junior colleges in my local area that still operate and maintain their accreditations.
Plan Spreadsheet
My main questions:
- Given that I'd like a language related BA (Spanish, English, or Linguistics), would you agree that UMPI seems like a top target candidate for my needs? Are there other programs offering English or Spanish degrees with a YourPace/Accelerator/competency type program available or that I should consider? I suppose a "teaching" track may also work if they are substantially easier/faster, but I prefer a language degree with all other things being equal.
- With reference to my plan, I'd say my priorities, in order, are: Easy(content/tests) > Speed > Costs. Would it make sense to just take some of the business classes which I currently have planned for study.com at UMPI directly if cost isn't really a factor for me?
- Given I have no Chemistry background, would it likely be substantially easier to just do Bio again via study.com to get the lab and eat the fact that my JC credit might not be of value? Does UMPI typically give the transferable credit value as elective credits if they consider the coursework similar to another course(like my Gen Bio creds from JC if I take 110L at study.com) or should I increase my sophia coursework to compensate if I go this route?
- Is it reasonable to think that I could acheive a BA in a calendar year if school becomes my new obsession and I have a solid background in relevant skills? I know this one is harder to know for each individual, but if others have experience with completing the coursework given a similar or weaker background, please let me know how it went for you!
- Has anyone here gone the English route at UMPI? Are there any classes that were particularly painful? I saw someone talking about the Marketing classes being particularly challenging for them, but not sure if any overlap with the English/Journalism/Comm degree I'm looking at.
- Any generic criticism or advice referring to my plan before I get too deep into the actual work here?
Skills/capacity summary:
- I work fulltime remotely, but I have no kids, and historically I dedicate 2+ hours average per work day to my current obsession and 4+ on weekends. Spanish has been getting ~3+ hours per work day for the last couple months.
- My English writing skills are at a college level and have been well-practiced over my career. I completed two college English courses already. Writing papers in English will be a breeze for me, although the shorter the better. :-)
- My Spanish is at an effective B1 level. I could take the DELE A2 and pass right now without studying further (passed a few practice exams a few weeks ago without problems or direct study), and sometimes I pass at a B1, it would probably take a few days of dedicated formal grammar study to be confident in passing the B1 (first intermediate level), but I've put in ~120+ hours over the last couple months and did 3.5 years in High School, so I'm really not worried here on the speaking and comprehension parts. Writing in Spanish is easy for me with Google docs doing the heavy lifting as it provides grammar and spelling highlighting as I go. Unfortunately, DELE has a strong grammar-as-proxy for competency bias (it's just easier to test for, I get it).
- For digital design/marketing part of this path, I'm already decent at getting around in Adobe Suite, and I started tech as a web designer/PHP developer, so I have a lot of relevant experience already researching and implementing web marketing, SEO, layouts, etc.
- For Math, I've already passed Pre-Calculus in JC (twice, lol, I took it again to review when I went back to JC the second time).
- Due to my profession, I am very skilled at looking at questions and scanning relevant content to get an answer, and I've always been an excellent test taker on standardized and multiple choice type exams. I was able to complete the first milestone of the Intro to Stats course on Sophia last night within a couple hours starting from 0 with an 86% on the exam despite speed-running the test in 20 minutes due to this particular skillset.
- My confidence is obviously pretty high. I'm not scared of proctored tests, and I do fine under observational pressure; the main annoyance I forsee with those is the scheduling slowing down my progress (similar to my only avoidance of classes on Sophia with touchstones).