08-07-2018, 09:31 PM
(08-07-2018, 09:09 PM)dfrecore Wrote: First, why do you think the BSBA/CIS degree is "easier"? I don't think that's the case at all. If I was going to recommend a degree for someone and they really wanted the Cybersecurity degree, there is absolutely zero chance I would recommend the BSBA/CIS degree. Not in a million years. I think the Cybersecurity degree is a thousand times more useful than the BSBA/CIS.
Second, why would you want to do the exact same degree as your wife when she knows exactly what she wants and you're not (I don't think) in the same field? I wouldn't spend a single second trying for the same degree as my husband just for the heck of it. He's in one field, I'm in another, we don't have the same interests, and we don't want the same degree.
You are separate people, with separate paths to take, don't try to limit her and don't limit yourself. Both of you go out there and get the degree each of you wants!
Sorry for the confusion, I'm not planning on doing the same degree as her. But I am planning out her path, so I tend to switch to using "I" without thinking or making it clear that I'm talking about the degree I was planning for her. I still have no idea what I want, but we can both start on some of the same general ed stuff.
Looking at the cybersecurity path and the number of specialized courses regarding programming vs the CIS path and the number of classes that can be tested out of, it certainly looks like the easier degree. And I'm not alone in that assessment as I read on other forums about CIS looking like the degree that people get when they 'can't hack it' in cybersecurity or computer sciences.
Right now we are both started on History of the US 1, so at least we have started moving towards something! I love US history, so I'm having a pretty easy time of some of it.