U of Arizona Masters Engineering Online Acceptance Rates

JHU’s online and part-time degrees (aka Engineering for Professionals) do not require the GREs, their full-time program does. Likely tuition is high, hopefully your comment above is that your company will reimburse (but some companies do limit per credit cost to say the state flagship).

My guess is that in some classes you will have to re-watch the same video 3 or 4 times, lots of schools now offer videos of many lectures, which is a big improvement (also might make a local school attractive since you could miss a few in-person lectures). Fast forwarding would be for the “lite” courses … there may be some, or maybe not (does rate my professor cover on-line courses ?).

Many of my classes were darn hard, but I wanted to learn. One of my fellow students who had been working in configuration management did not fare well, he thought even statistics classes were really hard to get a B in since he did not do technical work.

The EE will be more analytically intense than your industrial systems classes … and you may need to take some undergrad classes to catch up for some of the harder MS classes.

All things to consider …

Also, my hubby got an MS in EE after being a comp sci person for many years, and really never got to do the EE work he was hoping to do … but he has done well in software systems engineering and other less engineering areas.

My ChemE to ME swap was more successful, but I was working as an ME the whole time anyway and concentrated on work related coursework where I also had a lot of college and work background.

I would say 4 of the 10 required classes were academically challenging, 4 were OK, one or two really easy.