02-28-2023, 02:53 PM
Location: AL, USA
Age: 37
Current Grad Credits: 12 from 2017-2018
Statistics and Political Analysis, 3hr
Quantitative Methods, 3hr
Quantitative Methods II 3hr
Data Science for Public Policy 3hr
Goal: Career wise, I envision a possible path to Chief Data Officer at a Bureau or lower level (I know of a position 2 grades above where I am now and I imagine with my 20 years left until retirement I can get two promotions). In retirement, I'd like to teach public policy and political theory (PhD door open). I'd be interested in MPA, MBA, Interdisciplinary or Data Science masters degrees or certificate programs. I imagine stacking a MS+Cert to hit both the public admin and data sci sides.
Funding: 8 months + a little change of GI bill. I'd be very inclined to run this down to just a few weeks remaining then take a 6 month term (or longer?) somewhere because they should fund the entire term as long as I have at least 1 day of benefits remaining. Going this route I'd likely have to pay for at least part of some credential out of pocket, which I'm ok with as long as we aren't getting up to tens of thousands of dollars. I can cash flow one course/term at reasonable grad tuition.
Pursuit rate: I prefer a slower pace. Full time studies crushed me last time I tried this. Still, I want to minimize time at the same time, so somewhere that will accept more transfer credits would be useful.
Current thoughts: I'm toying with the idea of stacking Liberty University's interdisciplinary studies (focus on GIS and Government) with WGU's micro credentials (whatever I can complete in a 6 month term) for data analytics. I might have to pay for around 2 classes out of pocket at LU (assuming they transfer everything in) with very cheap tuition. I really love the idea of CU boulders MSDS because of the 1 credit pace, but it would be a long road. On the other hand I don't love that LU's 3hr courses are 8 weeks which seems like a lot of work for a short period of time, but I'd finish this degree very fast (assuming they take the transfer credits again). I'm really interested to hear some other thoughts as maybe there is an option that doesn't have the tradeoffs I'm wrestling with now.
Age: 37
Current Grad Credits: 12 from 2017-2018
Statistics and Political Analysis, 3hr
Quantitative Methods, 3hr
Quantitative Methods II 3hr
Data Science for Public Policy 3hr
Goal: Career wise, I envision a possible path to Chief Data Officer at a Bureau or lower level (I know of a position 2 grades above where I am now and I imagine with my 20 years left until retirement I can get two promotions). In retirement, I'd like to teach public policy and political theory (PhD door open). I'd be interested in MPA, MBA, Interdisciplinary or Data Science masters degrees or certificate programs. I imagine stacking a MS+Cert to hit both the public admin and data sci sides.
Funding: 8 months + a little change of GI bill. I'd be very inclined to run this down to just a few weeks remaining then take a 6 month term (or longer?) somewhere because they should fund the entire term as long as I have at least 1 day of benefits remaining. Going this route I'd likely have to pay for at least part of some credential out of pocket, which I'm ok with as long as we aren't getting up to tens of thousands of dollars. I can cash flow one course/term at reasonable grad tuition.
Pursuit rate: I prefer a slower pace. Full time studies crushed me last time I tried this. Still, I want to minimize time at the same time, so somewhere that will accept more transfer credits would be useful.
Current thoughts: I'm toying with the idea of stacking Liberty University's interdisciplinary studies (focus on GIS and Government) with WGU's micro credentials (whatever I can complete in a 6 month term) for data analytics. I might have to pay for around 2 classes out of pocket at LU (assuming they transfer everything in) with very cheap tuition. I really love the idea of CU boulders MSDS because of the 1 credit pace, but it would be a long road. On the other hand I don't love that LU's 3hr courses are 8 weeks which seems like a lot of work for a short period of time, but I'd finish this degree very fast (assuming they take the transfer credits again). I'm really interested to hear some other thoughts as maybe there is an option that doesn't have the tradeoffs I'm wrestling with now.
Working Toward: ME-EM, CU Boulder (Coursera)
Completed: TESU - BA Computer Science, 2023; TESU - AAS Applied Electronic Studies, 2012; K-State -BS Political Science, 2016
Completed: TESU - BA Computer Science, 2023; TESU - AAS Applied Electronic Studies, 2012; K-State -BS Political Science, 2016