A few years ago I earned my MBA through an Executive MBA program from American Sentinel University. I do not have a Bachelors degree. Now, I am interested in returning to a school for a Bachelors but, I would like to be able to transfer some of my credits earned. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated! Thanks, Brian
Sorry to go off on a tangent, I believe that from a credential point of view, having an MBA should satisfy most requirements for Bachelor's degrees. Of course, if this is being done for personal reasons then that's a different story.
Andrew Jackson University - Bachelor of Science in Business Administration (NA) - sponsored tuition so you pay USD500.00 for up to 3 courses at a time Aspen University - Master of Business Administration (NA) - tuition is about USD1000.00 per course
AMU/APU offers Business Admin degrees: http://www.amu.apus.edu/Academics/Degree-Programs/program.htm?progid=4457&program_type=Bachelors But since you have an EMBA have you considered a subject different from business for your BS/BA degree that relates to your career goals?
Instead of earning a bachelor's degree in general business, I would recommend a specialization in either finance or accounting.
Just some wild ideas: Foreign language/geography (if you are involved in international trade) Engineering Technology (if you are invovled in manuafacturing) Quality Assurance (service or manufacturing) English (writing tech manuals/media/teaching) Math (good for many jobs)
Since you already have a MBA, why not consider Leadership at the BA level? What is your purpose for the BA? That information would be very helpful. Pug
The purpose for the BA is primarily due to all of the questions that I get regarding having a MBA and not a BA.
Is that true? A Masters might be 36 credits and a typical Bachelors degree is 120. What about all those general education credits. After all, you wouldn't want to miss out on English Lit 101, would you?
Quote: Originally Posted by Bill Huffman Sorry to go off on a tangent, I believe that from a credential point of view, having an MBA should satisfy most requirements for Bachelor's degrees. Of course, if this is being done for personal reasons then that's a different story. I think Bill was referring to job requirements, vs. educational requirements.