/biz/
I am going to enroll on a degree part-time and study in the evening while keeping my job. How difficult will this be? Anyone done this?
Also, which degree is the most alpha / lucrative / will still be useful in 30 years? Engineering disciplines preferably.
>>1807672
Doing this atm. Don't have a night off. It's brutal but I think it will pay off. Kiss your social life goodbye if you want to do this and succeed.
>>1807672
Sociology. You'll thank me later.
>>1807780
No, nigga
>>1807834
Gender studies. You won't be thanking me later.
But in all seriousness, what is your current job, and what sounds interesting enough to you that you are willing to grind this out?
>>1807837
I currently work for a multinational oil and gas services group, as an energy engineering consultant. It is grunt work, but figured if I got a relevant degree I could work up since I've already got my foot in the door.
Of the engineering degrees, which one is the best?
>>1807958
electrical and materials my dude
>>1808522
Why those two?
I did it, got an extra master's degree while working full time. It actually felt easier to me. Since starting to work I've become more organized and generally faster in doing things than when I was a student watching tv and jerking off all day.
I can't say it killed my social life. I planned my life rigorously, including 'days off'. Only exam periods were very hard. Be sure to have some days off from work after exam periods or you'll crash.
>>1808790
What was your degree? How has it paid off?