06-26-2017, 02:47 PM
Hello all,
I wanted to post my experiences with recently completing a bachelors in electrical engineering technology at Excelsior College. I've lurked in these forums for awhile and didn't often see Excelsior-specific posts, much less those dealing with the electrical engineering technology program.
I had a previous non-engineering technology bachelors degree plus an associates in engineering technology. Combining all those credits together in my back-of-the-napkin calculation I figured I had a year (or maybe two, tops) of taking Excelsior classes ahead of me.
In fact, all my gen eds were covered and I was only missing one math course as well as the specific upper-level engineering courses required for the degree. My initial Excelsior admissions evaluation was a fair match to the official academic advising evaluation so I came in with around 80 credits. I had to argue for a few courses to transfer but for the most part my hands were tied as I didn't have enough upper-level engineering courses yet. The oddly worded Excelsior Written English requirement did cause me a lot of headache (more on that below).
I finished the entire program in about a year-and-a-half. Given a late-Fall start, a full year of courses, and then the last two courses the following Spring I managed to effectively benefit from three calendar year's worth of employee tuition reimbursement. So my total out of pocket for the bachelors degree was about $4500. That includes (roughly) 30 credits at Excelsior, 6 credits at other institutions, and 6 credits I tested out of.
Lessons learned:
Hope this information helps other students out there not only in this particular Excelsior program but those who are working on any online degree. It was at times a stressful experience (combined with a full-time job and family) but I do feel a sense of accomplishment and am proud I went through with it. If there are any specific questions I haven't addressed here, post them and I'll be glad to fill in the gaps.
I wanted to post my experiences with recently completing a bachelors in electrical engineering technology at Excelsior College. I've lurked in these forums for awhile and didn't often see Excelsior-specific posts, much less those dealing with the electrical engineering technology program.
I had a previous non-engineering technology bachelors degree plus an associates in engineering technology. Combining all those credits together in my back-of-the-napkin calculation I figured I had a year (or maybe two, tops) of taking Excelsior classes ahead of me.
In fact, all my gen eds were covered and I was only missing one math course as well as the specific upper-level engineering courses required for the degree. My initial Excelsior admissions evaluation was a fair match to the official academic advising evaluation so I came in with around 80 credits. I had to argue for a few courses to transfer but for the most part my hands were tied as I didn't have enough upper-level engineering courses yet. The oddly worded Excelsior Written English requirement did cause me a lot of headache (more on that below).
I finished the entire program in about a year-and-a-half. Given a late-Fall start, a full year of courses, and then the last two courses the following Spring I managed to effectively benefit from three calendar year's worth of employee tuition reimbursement. So my total out of pocket for the bachelors degree was about $4500. That includes (roughly) 30 credits at Excelsior, 6 credits at other institutions, and 6 credits I tested out of.
Lessons learned:
- Excelsior's Written English requirement: if you review this requirement in the official school handbook it sounds like there is a lot of leeway for your academic advisor to grant you transfer credit from previous coursework. In fact, this is not their approach. I had an American Lit course which could have been a match combined with my previous English Comp classes to satisfy their requirement, but Advising wasn't having it. Several times they suggested I take the Excelsior equivalent course, which I declined due to finding a much cheaper (and perhaps easier) English course elsewhere online. And this was after months of back-and-forth with my advisor as I suggested different options, submitted course syllabi, etc. It got to the point where she wouldn't reply to my emails for two weeks or more and that was just to say "NO." If I called and happened to get her she would answer my question right way however.
- Academic Advising could generally be a headache: if your transfer coursework descriptions matched exactly with the courses you were arguing for equivalency, then fine. If not, it was like pulling teeth and appealing to the program's dean didn't help. I found this part of the Excelsior experience to be the worst aspect as it was like dealing with any level of bureaucracy or human resources-type department. And you would get different answers to the same question depending on who answered the phone that day. For that reason alone I did benefit in one instance as a much more knowledgeable advisor gave me a better online option for the one math class I needed compared to the options offered by my main advisor.
- The Capstone: this final class wasn't so bad. It really was more procedurally difficult than technically difficult. Having kept good records of previous coursework (inc. labs, papers, projects, etc.) made the job a whole lot easier. In my particular program there is a hardware project to conceptualize, build, test and demonstrate but successful completion had more to do with adherence to weekly requirements than success at answering an overly challenging engineering problem. Overall, there was a lot of redtape in terms of course objectives and many of those overlapped, didn't make sense, or were a waste of time. But everyone in my cohort left feedback to that effect so maybe Excelsior will streamline/improve the capstone for future students.
Hope this information helps other students out there not only in this particular Excelsior program but those who are working on any online degree. It was at times a stressful experience (combined with a full-time job and family) but I do feel a sense of accomplishment and am proud I went through with it. If there are any specific questions I haven't addressed here, post them and I'll be glad to fill in the gaps.