cancmm
Structural
- Dec 4, 2009
- 93
I'm currently taking my first graduate course while I continue working full time. My primary goal was to advance my knowledge in areas I lacked, specifically dynamics, earthquake engineering and finite element analysis, while keeping the thought of pursuing a full master's degree in my back pocket. Unfortunately, I can only find about 3 or 4 courses that will actually be useful to me. Other courses I could take would reiterate a lot of what I already taught myself or be relatively useless all together. With 10 courses being required for a masters, that's a lot of fluff.
I know that a master's degree is definitely good to have, but unfortunately times are tough and my employer isn't reimbursing tuition for the time being. On top of that, I'm paying out-of-state rates so it ain't cheap, especially on a temporarily reduced salary
From a resume perspective, I was thinking that I could simply list the courses I took, and any future employer might look at these to see I got the important ones knocked off. Is this realistic?
Bottom line is that I want to do what's best for my career but I don't want to spend a lot of time and money if it won't get me where anywhere.
Thanks in advance for your input.
I know that a master's degree is definitely good to have, but unfortunately times are tough and my employer isn't reimbursing tuition for the time being. On top of that, I'm paying out-of-state rates so it ain't cheap, especially on a temporarily reduced salary
From a resume perspective, I was thinking that I could simply list the courses I took, and any future employer might look at these to see I got the important ones knocked off. Is this realistic?
Bottom line is that I want to do what's best for my career but I don't want to spend a lot of time and money if it won't get me where anywhere.
Thanks in advance for your input.