A PE license is something you get AFTER you take (and pass) the FE exam and after you graduate from college with a B.S. in some engineering field.Originally posted by: edprush
my boss told me he would pay me an extra $14k a year if I get a P.E. license.
I don't know of any online-only BS in engineering programs. Most online degree places (IF they're even accredited) are associates type programs. Depending on your backgroudn, you're looking at 2-4 years for a BS in some Engineering field.Originally posted by: edprush
I understand about testing for the PE.
I just need to get a BS in engineering then study like a maniac for the PE and hopefully pass it.
Originally posted by: rgwalt
What engineering field would you study? You are probably looking at a solid 3 years of course work. Then, you'll need to take and pass the FE. Then you'll need to work in your field for a certain amount of time (5 years?) before you can take a PE.
From what I understand, engineering degrees typically are not offered via on-line programs.
R
Originally posted by: beer
There can't be anything accreddited that is online. Most of engineering is lab work! Why should YOU be able to get a degree that most of us engineers bust our ass for four years for? People like you make me sick. I hope to god you can't find anything and I hope you get fired in addition for presenting what are essentially faulty credentials. Furthermore I hope that if you apply with a 'degree' that you got online, your employer finds out that you are essentially a phony and that you are blackballed from most jobs that you would ever apply for again.
Originally posted by: remagavon
Originally posted by: beer
There can't be anything accreddited that is online. Most of engineering is lab work! Why should YOU be able to get a degree that most of us engineers bust our ass for four years for? People like you make me sick. I hope to god you can't find anything and I hope you get fired in addition for presenting what are essentially faulty credentials. Furthermore I hope that if you apply with a 'degree' that you got online, your employer finds out that you are essentially a phony and that you are blackballed from most jobs that you would ever apply for again.
What crawled up your back end? Did you even read the OP? There are plenty of accreddited online courses, even MIT offers some distance degree services for those in the armed services. Some people have no other choice than to take courses online or stay at their present education level, if for instance they were a working parent and the nearest school was an hr away? Online exams can be taken at the student's convience and that is absolutely essential in a situation such as that.
I personally don't like online courses, having taken one myself; however I recognize that they do have a place.
Originally posted by: beer
Originally posted by: remagavon
Originally posted by: beer
There can't be anything accreddited that is online. Most of engineering is lab work! Why should YOU be able to get a degree that most of us engineers bust our ass for four years for? People like you make me sick. I hope to god you can't find anything and I hope you get fired in addition for presenting what are essentially faulty credentials. Furthermore I hope that if you apply with a 'degree' that you got online, your employer finds out that you are essentially a phony and that you are blackballed from most jobs that you would ever apply for again.
What crawled up your back end? Did you even read the OP? There are plenty of accreddited online courses, even MIT offers some distance degree services for those in the armed services. Some people have no other choice than to take courses online or stay at their present education level, if for instance they were a working parent and the nearest school was an hr away? Online exams can be taken at the student's convience and that is absolutely essential in a situation such as that.
I personally don't like online courses, having taken one myself; however I recognize that they do have a place.
Engineering degrees have no place in online-only programs. It is one thing for a BA in Business or a Criminal Justice degree to be online, both of which are essentially based upon how well you can regurgitate reading. It is another thing for an ABET-accredited engineering degre to be offered online. Engineering degrees require considerable amounts of lab work using equipment that most people cannot afford.
So what you are saying is that you are fine with the concept that someone designing your bridges, buildings, computers, airplanes, elevators, ships, and oil rigs without ever having set foot in an engineering lab? And that you think that such a degree, that the OP intends on completing on his own, in his spare time, for a couple of hours a week, should be considered equivalent to most undergraduates who spend 30 hours a week, between classes, labs, and homework, for four years, to do? Because that is *exactly* what you are doing by condoning the OPs actions.
I'm sorry that certain people do not have the time to set aside to become an engineer. Extenuating cirucmstances are not an excuse for cheating your way through an education. It's fine for certain online programs, but if you can't spare the time to be a full-time undergraduate, I don't really think you deserve an engineering degree.
If you take 10 hours a semester (which I would consider part-time), assuming 120 (or more) for a BSEE (which is about right), it would take you 6 years to complete. Even if you are brilliant, 10 class hours would mean 10 hours of homework on average per week, which means 20 hours per week total, for six years. The mere suggestion that the OP doesn't want to spend this kind of time and wants to cover himself in grease and slide his way through the system is just disgusting.
I understand about testing for the PE.
I just need to get a BS in engineering then study like a maniac for the PE and hopefully pass it.
Originally posted by: beer
Originally posted by: remagavon
Originally posted by: beer
There can't be anything accreddited that is online. Most of engineering is lab work! Why should YOU be able to get a degree that most of us engineers bust our ass for four years for? People like you make me sick. I hope to god you can't find anything and I hope you get fired in addition for presenting what are essentially faulty credentials. Furthermore I hope that if you apply with a 'degree' that you got online, your employer finds out that you are essentially a phony and that you are blackballed from most jobs that you would ever apply for again.
What crawled up your back end? Did you even read the OP? There are plenty of accreddited online courses, even MIT offers some distance degree services for those in the armed services. Some people have no other choice than to take courses online or stay at their present education level, if for instance they were a working parent and the nearest school was an hr away? Online exams can be taken at the student's convience and that is absolutely essential in a situation such as that.
I personally don't like online courses, having taken one myself; however I recognize that they do have a place.
Engineering degrees have no place in online-only programs. It is one thing for a BA in Business or a Criminal Justice degree to be online, both of which are essentially based upon how well you can regurgitate reading. It is another thing for an ABET-accredited engineering degre to be offered online. Engineering degrees require considerable amounts of lab work using equipment that most people cannot afford.
So what you are saying is that you are fine with the concept that someone designing your bridges, buildings, computers, airplanes, elevators, ships, and oil rigs without ever having set foot in an engineering lab? And that you think that such a degree, that the OP intends on completing on his own, in his spare time, for a couple of hours a week, should be considered equivalent to most undergraduates who spend 30 hours a week, between classes, labs, and homework, for four years, to do? Because that is *exactly* what you are doing by condoning the OPs actions.
I'm sorry that certain people do not have the time to set aside to become an engineer. Extenuating cirucmstances are not an excuse for cheating your way through an education. It's fine for certain online programs, but if you can't spare the time to be a full-time undergraduate, I don't really think you deserve an engineering degree.
If you take 10 hours a semester (which I would consider part-time), assuming 120 (or more) for a BSEE (which is about right), it would take you 6 years to complete. Even if you are brilliant, 10 class hours would mean 10 hours of homework on average per week, which means 20 hours per week total, for six years. The mere suggestion that the OP doesn't want to spend this kind of time and wants to cover himself in grease and slide his way through the system is just disgusting.
Originally posted by: RaynorWolfcastle
Originally posted by: beer
Originally posted by: remagavon
Originally posted by: beer
There can't be anything accreddited that is online. Most of engineering is lab work! Why should YOU be able to get a degree that most of us engineers bust our ass for four years for? People like you make me sick. I hope to god you can't find anything and I hope you get fired in addition for presenting what are essentially faulty credentials. Furthermore I hope that if you apply with a 'degree' that you got online, your employer finds out that you are essentially a phony and that you are blackballed from most jobs that you would ever apply for again.
What crawled up your back end? Did you even read the OP? There are plenty of accreddited online courses, even MIT offers some distance degree services for those in the armed services. Some people have no other choice than to take courses online or stay at their present education level, if for instance they were a working parent and the nearest school was an hr away? Online exams can be taken at the student's convience and that is absolutely essential in a situation such as that.
I personally don't like online courses, having taken one myself; however I recognize that they do have a place.
Engineering degrees have no place in online-only programs. It is one thing for a BA in Business or a Criminal Justice degree to be online, both of which are essentially based upon how well you can regurgitate reading. It is another thing for an ABET-accredited engineering degre to be offered online. Engineering degrees require considerable amounts of lab work using equipment that most people cannot afford.
So what you are saying is that you are fine with the concept that someone designing your bridges, buildings, computers, airplanes, elevators, ships, and oil rigs without ever having set foot in an engineering lab? And that you think that such a degree, that the OP intends on completing on his own, in his spare time, for a couple of hours a week, should be considered equivalent to most undergraduates who spend 30 hours a week, between classes, labs, and homework, for four years, to do? Because that is *exactly* what you are doing by condoning the OPs actions.
I'm sorry that certain people do not have the time to set aside to become an engineer. Extenuating cirucmstances are not an excuse for cheating your way through an education. It's fine for certain online programs, but if you can't spare the time to be a full-time undergraduate, I don't really think you deserve an engineering degree.
If you take 10 hours a semester (which I would consider part-time), assuming 120 (or more) for a BSEE (which is about right), it would take you 6 years to complete. Even if you are brilliant, 10 class hours would mean 10 hours of homework on average per week, which means 20 hours per week total, for six years. The mere suggestion that the OP doesn't want to spend this kind of time and wants to cover himself in grease and slide his way through the system is just disgusting.
HA! 30 hours/week is a light week for a full-time EE student (as I'm sure you know, beer). Hell I have 17 hours of lecture time alone, add to that projects, lab time, tutorials, studying and assignments and I'm pretty sure I my workload approaches 50-60 hours on a regular basis. This isn't even counting the end of term when everything becomes insane.
This was posted for the OP's benefit so that he knows what a typical Engineering student goes through. Did you really think they paid engineers an extra $14K a year for a diploma you could get online in your spare time for a couple of years?
Originally posted by: JohnCU
I have a hard enough problem understanding this stuff when a professor explains it, much less having to do it online... that'd be crazy.
<--- spent 50 minutes sitting in calculus II working on one problem today(approximate the integral of arctan(x^2) from 0 to 1/2)...
Originally posted by: edprush
I understand about testing for the PE.
I just need to get a BS in engineering then study like a maniac for the PE and hopefully pass it.
