Hello friends I need help for my friend who is trying to get into the final year program of any accredited online university with a brick and mortar campus. He has a regionally accredited bachelors degree in Electrical Engineering and is trying to switch into another bachelors degree program at the final year level in an Oil and Gas - related field, Engineering Managment field or Logistics/Supply Chain field. Please post your suggestions ASAP. Many Thanks. Sam His details at a glance: Education: Bachelors degree in Electrical Engineering REQUEST: Seeking final year entry into any accredited Bachelors degree in Oil and Gas - related field, Engineering Managment field or Logistics/Supply Chain field. School type: Accredited Online school with residential campus Internship: Completed 1 year Engineering based internship program at an Oil and Gas Multinational corporation. Post-Graduation work experience: Worked for many years in an administrative role at different establishments. Budget: US$ 6000
The only DL undergrad engineering degrees I'm aware of are through University of North Dakota: http://distance.und.edu/engineering/ Why doesn't your friend just look at a grad degree in the engineering field of interest?
Is he flexible on one or the other of these two requirements? Relatedly, in-state versus out-of-state tuition differentials can be substantial; he should start by checking every state school in the state or states in which he can claim residency.
Thanks to AV8R and Jonathan for their contributions. I will relay the info to my friend. I look forward to more suggestions. Thanks. Sam
The UND degrees in Chemical Engineering and possibly Civil Engineering would be good for the oil and gas fields. For 30 additional credits he could design his own bachelors degree at TESC using the LDAS approach. He could take courses of interest at a variety of colleges and universities and transfer them to TESC. He could include engineering, geology, and management courses (some via CLEP/DSST possibly) http://www.tesc.edu/6503.php Other degrees that might be of interest: NMSU Master of Industrial Engineering http://vrc.nmsu.edu/distance/degrees/details.cfm?id=33 Colorado State has this Masters in Systems Engineering http://www.learn.colostate.edu/degrees/systems-engineering/ University of London has this PGD/Masters program in Petrolium Geoscience (would a great compliment to an EE working in the energy field). http://www.londonexternal.ac.uk/prospective_students/postgraduate/holloway/petro_geoscience/index.shtml
6000 divided by the 30 to 36 semester hours required at an absolute bare minimum for a second bachelor's degree is 167 to 200 per semester hour; this is an awfully tight budget, for a relatively narrow, niche band of subjects.