06-20-2021, 10:41 AM
(06-20-2021, 09:16 AM)Kab Wrote: Benefit of having it vs dificulty and cost of having it= worth having it for a history degree. Specially since there are not to many history courses cheap.
(06-19-2021, 08:55 PM)NC Coach Wrote: I'm likely going for the history degree at TESU. Does anyone think this would duplicate either of the US History courses? It doesn't seem to me like it should, but I don't want to spend time on it if it would.
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I understand that may be the case for someone just starting out who needs a degree for a career, and/or someone who must watch every penny. I don't need any degree at all. I'm in my 50's and a senior level executive in the mortgage business who makes well into six figures. I want a degree for personal fulfillment only.
I'd rather study something I enjoy. When I realized how many history books I have on my Kindle I felt that is a pretty good indication it's a subject I enjoy reading about. If I'm going to put in the effort, it might as well be learning more about something I'd read about even if it wasn't in a class.
Cost is honestly pretty unimportant to me, as long as it remains within reason. I've also mapped it out and quite honestly I don't feel the cost will be that significant. There are history degree roadmaps on this site, and while it's not the cheapest degree, it isn't that bad.
West Virginia University at Parkersburg, Associate of Applied Science, Board of Governors program
Traditional College Credits (RA):
18 Credits
ALEKS & CSM Learn:
12 Credits
Straighterline:
15 Credits
Sophia:
38 Credits
Total from All Sources:
83 Credits
Traditional College Credits (RA):
18 Credits
ALEKS & CSM Learn:
12 Credits
Straighterline:
15 Credits
Sophia:
38 Credits
Total from All Sources:
83 Credits