04-12-2024, 10:01 PM
(04-12-2024, 09:44 PM)bjcheung77 Wrote:Sarit1046 Wrote:I am curious if anyone has faced this dilemma before and, if so, would you consider spending that much money on basically contentless courses?
Good question, I haven't been able to gauge any standards for the journals aside from them being peer-reviewed. The degree is practitioner-focused rather than purely academic, so that might also factor in.
How do you know these courses are contentless? Does it not teach much because it being practitioner focused versus being more academic in content? I think it really depends on how people perceive what is being taught and the content...
Questions for you, what was your undergrad and grad, where did you take them? Are you merging your subject matter interests in Cybersecurity and Psychology and trying to get into this PhD Cyberpsychology? What's your budget?
The curriculum lets you view them, and they consist only of weekly reports summarizing in as short of replies as desired the progress you've made with your chair. The classes don't have any reading material or assignments, so it's completely independent research which I actually enjoy, but taking so many courses meant to be to prepare a deliverable that's already complete is hard to justify, at least for me.
My budget would only cover one course per semester, and there are nine outstanding courses, but except for the one Defense course, all others would be obsolete now.
As far as occupation, I have a background in cybersecurity and counterterrorism, with a special interest in psychology and healthcare. My research focuses on the security side of cyberpsychology.