Are you planning to move into more technical positions like engineering or into managment? If management, then a business degree would seem to be your best move. For technical degrees, computer science or software development is fairly easy to do by the methods here, but other types of engineering (for example electrical engineering) are much less so.
If there are better jobs that you already would be hired for, except for the lack of a degree, then a liberal studies/arts degree would be the absolute easiest and quickest...but business can be nearly as fast and easy, if you have experience and aptitude for that subject.
If there are better jobs that you already would be hired for, except for the lack of a degree, then a liberal studies/arts degree would be the absolute easiest and quickest...but business can be nearly as fast and easy, if you have experience and aptitude for that subject.
NanoDegree: Intro to Self-Driving Cars (2019)
Coursera: Stanford Machine Learning (2019)
TESU: BA in Comp Sci (2016)
TECEP:Env Ethics (2015); TESU PLA:Software Eng, Computer Arch, C++, Advanced C++, Data Struct (2015); TESU Courses:Capstone, Database Mngmnt Sys, Op Sys, Artificial Intel, Discrete Math, Intro to Portfolio Dev, Intro PLA (2014-16); DSST:Anthro, Pers Fin, Astronomy (2014); CLEP:Intro to Soc (2014); Saylor.org:Intro to Computers (2014); CC: 69 units (1980-88)
PLA Tips Thread - TESU: What is in a Portfolio?
Coursera: Stanford Machine Learning (2019)
TESU: BA in Comp Sci (2016)
TECEP:Env Ethics (2015); TESU PLA:Software Eng, Computer Arch, C++, Advanced C++, Data Struct (2015); TESU Courses:Capstone, Database Mngmnt Sys, Op Sys, Artificial Intel, Discrete Math, Intro to Portfolio Dev, Intro PLA (2014-16); DSST:Anthro, Pers Fin, Astronomy (2014); CLEP:Intro to Soc (2014); Saylor.org:Intro to Computers (2014); CC: 69 units (1980-88)
PLA Tips Thread - TESU: What is in a Portfolio?