LOL
in truth, if I had it to do all over again, I would have become a lawyer or doctor...... look around at other online classes. that seems like a lot of money for online....
just my 2 cents worth
I can see why you'd say that because Engineering (including software development and hardware development), whilst given the title of a "professional" field, are not shown anywhere near the same respect that people in law or medical professions receive. This means that your job prospects, in terms of the money you can earn, are quite bleak in the Engineering field. Well paid positions in Engineering are few and far between.
In the medical profession, you graduate from University and then when you apply for a job they already expect you to have zero experience. This is because the medical profession has a very organised structure in place to deal with graduate doctors - they take them on straight out of University and they then follow an intense training program, lasting over a number of years, where they slowly gain the work experience they need. Along the way they're offered a very good salary (although they do work hard for it) and once they're finished they can qualify as a consultant, at which point they can be on a very good salary indeed.
In Engineering there is no such training programme. Once you graduate, you are cast out into the real world with no experience to show for yourself. Employers don't accept that you'll be inexperienced, they just want the right person for the job. So without the experience, you are doomed.
The only way to overcome this is to do personal projects yourself (or, if you're in software, write lots of programs). Then, at least when you go to interviews you can show them some polished designs that you've done yourself. These can be sold to the employers as "experience". If you turn up to an interview with nothing but a qualification and your University project to show them... forget it you won't be hired.
So that's why Engineering is a bad profession. You need to be pretty smart to get a good Engineering degree, but you won't enjoy the same respect afterwards that people in law or medical professions do. That's just the way it is.
I never chose Engineering, it chose me. Electronics was the only thing I ever enjoyed. But, if any child of mine ever asks me if they should also pursue Engineering as a profession... I'd tell them not to, unless it's something they can say they really ENJOY doing!
Apple Hammer