04-21-2020, 07:37 PM
(This post was last modified: 04-21-2020, 07:41 PM by djarumlights.
Edit Reason: addendum
)
Posting in the Big 3 forum as it seems this is probably the route I'll need to go. If it needs to be relocated, please do so!
Ok, so, storytime! Flubbed the whole actual college experience thing when that happened twenty years ago because reasons (health-related, mind you). What tatters of a GPA I have might amount to 0.6 and barely a sophomore (got a few mercy Ds so. . . yeah). C'est life.
Went to work, started a family, and moved from slinging pizza to a career with an oilfield technology company, and have been doing that non-stop until the recent nosedive.
Spent a couple years as a technician performing low to mid-grade IT and EET type field work then moved into a supervisory role over a team of the same sort I was along with other specialty disciplines (hydraulic/mechanical guys, heavy electricians and mechanics, PLC techs, etc). Spent seven to ten years growing in that role 'til they told me "so long and goodnight" a month ago. I knew it was coming. I'd previously told my manager to take me out back and shoot me first so the other guys could keep a job.
I figure if I'm finally going to try for a degree, now is the time. Starting from scratch though. . . ouch! So I dug around and happened upon this particular forum. Found the whole Sophia thing and started poking at that. Before I dive off too deeply though, I wanted to ask those of you who've done this before/are doing now what my previous career might count for at TESU et al. Would you suggest I go ahead and try to at least get 101 and 102 level courses knocked out on Sophia while the opportunity is present or would that end up being redundant?
Some additional points:
Quick clarification: I understand it's not life experience credit per se, but the door is potentially open to have said experience evaluated for competency/credit. That's what I'm wanting to know about. How does that work? What's required? What should I gather up?
Ok, so, storytime! Flubbed the whole actual college experience thing when that happened twenty years ago because reasons (health-related, mind you). What tatters of a GPA I have might amount to 0.6 and barely a sophomore (got a few mercy Ds so. . . yeah). C'est life.
Went to work, started a family, and moved from slinging pizza to a career with an oilfield technology company, and have been doing that non-stop until the recent nosedive.
Spent a couple years as a technician performing low to mid-grade IT and EET type field work then moved into a supervisory role over a team of the same sort I was along with other specialty disciplines (hydraulic/mechanical guys, heavy electricians and mechanics, PLC techs, etc). Spent seven to ten years growing in that role 'til they told me "so long and goodnight" a month ago. I knew it was coming. I'd previously told my manager to take me out back and shoot me first so the other guys could keep a job.
I figure if I'm finally going to try for a degree, now is the time. Starting from scratch though. . . ouch! So I dug around and happened upon this particular forum. Found the whole Sophia thing and started poking at that. Before I dive off too deeply though, I wanted to ask those of you who've done this before/are doing now what my previous career might count for at TESU et al. Would you suggest I go ahead and try to at least get 101 and 102 level courses knocked out on Sophia while the opportunity is present or would that end up being redundant?
Some additional points:
- I don't really have many records of accomplishments from work (my fault for not thinking ahead enough to safeguard some of the things I worked on). I could probably get some form of record of in-house classes I attended/passed from a previous manager, but validation beyond a list of course codes in a .xls file is nigh impossible as what was a phenomenal training department got gutted during some heavy reorganization a couple of years back. I could email each of the Big Three individually explaining all this, but I'm not ready for my phone and email to go completely nuclear. I need a plan and some straight talk before I commit a substantial sum of money and time to a specific institution.
- I can explain a typical day in the life of my previous role with great clarity, speak on what projects I was involved in, describe all sorts of major scenarios where I was in a lead capacity and communicating updates/issues to VP/P level management.
- Hopefully the writing style presented here indicates that I've got at least two-thirds a brain. Not sure if that helps my case or not.
- Not sure if it's relevant, but I'm not quite 40, so I've seen/done some things already far as life in general goes.
- Re-hash/TL;DR of experience: four to five years as a field tech doing EET and IT type work, seven to ten years in management with increasing responsibilities over time.
- Re-hash/TL;DR of college credit onhand: HAH!
Quick clarification: I understand it's not life experience credit per se, but the door is potentially open to have said experience evaluated for competency/credit. That's what I'm wanting to know about. How does that work? What's required? What should I gather up?