KootK
Structural
- Oct 16, 2001
- 18,627
I need some career advice. I realize that there's a seperate forum for career stuff. However, I really need to hear from practising structural engineers specifically, so I'm going to post here.
I just wrapped up my master's degree in structural engineering. I'm flirting with the idea of pursuing a second degree. The university across the street fom my office offers a graduate degree in project management. It's obviously geared towards large capital projects. That being said, most of the principles translate well to consulting projects as well.
So yeah, the program sounds interesting. However, like all grad programs , I'm sure that the work load will be pretty intense. I'd probably put in some late nights, skip some workouts, and my FT job performance would invariably suffer a little.
My question is this: is a PM degree a worthwhile investment for someone wanting to manage stuctural engineering projects? If you have a similar degree, has it served you well? If you hire structural engineers, would you consider a PM degree to be a significant asset?
Thanks,
Kootenay
I just wrapped up my master's degree in structural engineering. I'm flirting with the idea of pursuing a second degree. The university across the street fom my office offers a graduate degree in project management. It's obviously geared towards large capital projects. That being said, most of the principles translate well to consulting projects as well.
So yeah, the program sounds interesting. However, like all grad programs , I'm sure that the work load will be pretty intense. I'd probably put in some late nights, skip some workouts, and my FT job performance would invariably suffer a little.
My question is this: is a PM degree a worthwhile investment for someone wanting to manage stuctural engineering projects? If you have a similar degree, has it served you well? If you hire structural engineers, would you consider a PM degree to be a significant asset?
Thanks,
Kootenay