From what I understand, instead of paying per credit hour you pay per 6 month term. If you get an IT degree, you get Comptia, Amazon, ITIL and Linux certifications included in the tuition. So not only do you get the degree but the training and certs. That's a pretty good deal.
2x Grad here - WGU is a God send. Absolutely game changer and leaps and bounds above many brick and mortar schools. I have a degree from a major b&m university as well. The price has gone up of course as all things but join now and change your life.
I had an AS in graphic design. Got my BS in Cloud Computing from WGU. It landed me a great government job. WGU was so worth it. Best $9k I ever spent. I doubled my salary with my new position.
@@romanlukichev4971 neither really. I am customer support. Think more like local specialized help desk. It pays 6 figures a year and I have a nice pension. I think I just got really lucky. But without WGU I didn't have a chance.
How is that cloud computing major? I am deciding now between cloud computing and information security & assurance. Do you think there a lot of overlap between the two? I am leaning towards cloud computing because I have been studying cybersecurity for a couple years now and have my security+ already but no luck with jobs as of yet
I just retired from working for the government, and let me tell you about how many people we have hired as contractors and even Civil Service positions who had WGU degrees. On my small base alone, more than half of the hirees were WGU graduates with BS and/or MS degrees in Cyber/CompScience and most of them finished their programs within a year. I and my counterpart were both GS-12s with no degrees making 6-figures, and we see a ton of these new folks come in and make that right off the bat. I am now in the BS-CS program for my next big tole in the Space Industry, and my counterpart is in the Cyber program to keep himself competitive enough to snag the GS-13 spot when our boss retires. WGU is legit THE school to go through for Government jobs right now.
I currently work for the government and am enroute to enrolling in WGU. I will say that more than half the personnel in the G6 (if you know what that is) have degrees from WGU. I recently went downstairs to talk to some of the cyber and networking personnel; they all said that it doesn't matter how you get the degree, but that you are comfortable learning. The sidenote from all of them was that if you like to get things done ASAP, go WGU.
I really feel bad for anyone going to a traditional state school or private school where they have to fight for a spot in a class of 20 people, pay for books that cost as much as the class, and sit around and listen to professors who haven’t worked a real job in over 30 years talk about how much they enjoyed cyber security.
@thechillmaster5836 Because CEH is expensive and it be nice to get it free. "It's garbage" ya I hear that all the time, and that may very well be the case from an actual learning/content standpoint. However at the end of the day it is the second most requested Cyber Security Cert by HR and it's not by a small margin. What is the value of certs to you? Industry recognition? The Industry says they are all trash. Learning? I don't think most of them are very practical but learning can definitely be a second. HR? Well the CEH is king in this regard, no matter how much people don't like that. At the End of the day the CISSP, OSCP, CEH, and Sec+ are the only certs HR cares about (and Sans) so they are the only certs that really have any value at all.
I'm enrolling right now and I super appreciate you doing these videos. It makes me feel confident going forward that my choice in WGU for an undergrad in cyber security was a good choice
@@NavyBluesandShoes I completed my first 6 month term in the Cybersecurity undergrad program. So far it is pretty great! I will outline a few things, but feel free to ask me any questions. The course is truly self paced, the coursework feels very clear, the professors are super helpful and the platform/website has had no issues. Once you start a term, you cannot transfer anymore credits to your degree. One loophole is that some of the classes have a single objective, attain certification x/y/z. So I am taking a break between terms, you can take up to 5 months in between. During this time I plan on self-studying and paying for Network+ and Project+. Any certification attained will be honored for full credits toward your degree plan.
I completed my first term, feel free to ask me any questions. The admin side was easy, all the classes have felt very clear, the professors are helpful, the staff and my program mentor have been fantastic. Once you begin a term, you can no longer transfer credits to your degree, make sure get them all. There is one type of loophole to this, I will explain. Right now I'm on term break, you may take up to 5 months in between terms as a break. During this break I am going to self-study and complete my Network+ and Project+ certs. Any certification that is acquired, no matter when, must be accepted by WGU. Many of the courses have one requirement and that is to pass a certification exam. Feel free to ask me anything!
@@adamtorres2014 Its your own pace except for the clinical parts since their on a set schedule, but a course like A&P, English Comp. can be completed in a week.
Thank you for this! Your other video is what made me finally go through with the decision. I’m getting my masters in cybersecurity and information assurance as well and start March 1st.
Needed this video. I had a bad semester. A lot of life happened this last year making me fall back and it’s hard to keep the focus with that and my overnight 12’s. When things settle a little bit i will take the non FA semester and get back on track.
The reason I chose WGU is because one 6 month term cost like $5k. Keiser was charging $11k (including books and fees) per 4 month semester come to find out a lot of online colleges (like snhu) charge about $450+ per credit hour. National average for a bacholars is $25-$35k. I also like being able to complete my course at a faster pace, you can finish your bacholars in about 6months or less. Also for the inspiring nurses they offer the BSN (pre-licensure) meaning you can enroll without being a nurse, you will earn you RN license while in school and do your clinincals at their partner labs in your state.
Thank you! Thank You!! Your video and the wonderful people who made comments has helped me make a decision about attending WGU and I AM! Heading to there website now.....thank you and thanks everyone else😀
@@Chainless_Slave7 It's Going better than I expected. I only have 10 classes + 1 capstone so it's easy. I expect to gain a bachelor's degree and also a better job. Now I wfh as a cybersecurity analyst making $64k but I would like a new job in Cybersecurity paying at least $80k.
Yeah...the CISSP isn't horrible but it just feels draining. At some point you just get enough certs that you feel drained every year from getting a new one or having to get CEUs for existing ones...
Great video! I have a bachelors in liberal arts already and my full 36 months of gi bill. My plan is to knock out the masters at WGU in a year, I can then use the remaining time on SANS grad cert pathways which you can use your gi bill for (these are separate to the sans degree program and are based on learning pathways).
This is my most likely path. I am in my capstone for the MSITM, and I plan to go to SANS to get a graduate certificate with what I have left in the GIBILL.
@@angelgueosepulveda3151 yeah my goal is to land a job as a SOC analyst once I’m done with my masters, then use the sans graduate path to specialize from there based on what I want to go into since they have incident response/pentesting/cloud etc
@@DigitalHoplite I think it is a good plan. SANS have really good pathways of certifications in whatever you want to specialize. I wish you good luck on your future education.
WGI Alumni, Best decision I ever made. Graduated 10/2018, and walked in 2/2019 in Orlando, worse thing that happened is that I waited until 1/2020 to pursue a new job, and guess what happened. However, due to Bachelors in Business Administration I have received great job offers after the plandemic happened.
@@imbrion7981I’m starring cybersecurity associates next with with the GI bill. Do you think wgu was better than going to a college since it’s “faster”?
I am currently attending SANS and pursuing the Bachelor's in Applied Cybersecurity. Earned my first GIAC GFACT cert in March and studying for the GISF cert next. Previously, I was a double-major in UHWO and was pursuing bachelors in cybersecurity and information security & assurance before transferring. It was when I participated in the National Cyber League competition that I heard about SANS reputation. Cheers!
I'm using some va benefits for WGU and would not recommend the cybersecurity program unless you have experience in the field. WGU does not actually have instructors despite the name given to individuals who's sole purpose is to merely provide you with links to resources. There is no break down of the material, and zero instruction. I am not sure it is entirely worth the amount of tuition they charge, given the fact that you can find much of the same resources they provide.
I think WGU is mostly ideal for people looking to switch jobs. I got a friend who got a Bachelor of Science in Cybersecurity and Information Assurance (BSCSIA) and while I'm happy for him, I don't think it was the right move. I can't imagine employers holding online degree programs in the same regard as regular degrees, and he doesn't have any connections either. On top of these things, he obtained his degree in only one year (Provided, he tested out of a lot of classes and was not working).
I got a bachelor’s in sport management back in 2000. If I wanted to go the WGU route, would I need to get a bachelor’s of something in IT before looking to get into one of their master’s programs? I’m 47 with ZERO tech experience or knowledge. I know it’s daunting, but I am hungry and excited to learn. As I am a bit advanced in age, I need to ensure that I go with the most efficient and effective path. Any advice would be tremendously appreciated!
As an immigrant and US citizen, who has a foreign degree, I can tell you. That WGU has affordable certifications, which will cost you about 4,000 dollars. It is just a starting point, after it you will need to make your own project, and become a life long IT Learner. And maybe you land a tech job, if you put a lot of effort into it.
IMHO while certifications could indeed teach you some techniques - university degree (real university study) teaches you how to think in a special way. At BSc it is one level, at engineering degree it gives you additional perspective, Master Degree gives you more academic way of thinking - where you can build your system of knowledge correctly and communicate it to the other people in the area of your specialization, PhD :) - this one is crazy and if it done correctly (even if not finished) gives you even more insight in how to think and see how details are really influencing bigger systems and how areas of technology and science really interconnected and opens your mind (again if it is done correctly and not just for degree and publications).
@thegeth4293 Same. I got an Associates Degree in Cybersecurity from Moraine Valley Community College. I stopped applying to jobs. Yesterday I sent WGU my transcripts because the Associates Degree counts towards the WGU Bachelors degree in Cybersecurity. I plan to start WGU June 1st. Have you ever thought about getting a Bachelors degree?
@@Theinsomniac826 I start at WGU on May 1 for their IT degree. I'm also doing a CCNA course on udemy in the mean time. It sucks, I got my 2 year degree and can't get a job to save my life, I checked LinkedIn's analytics, and about 60% of my competition for entry level help desk jobs have a bachelor's degree
Could you make a refreshed video of how to nail your interview for your first tech job? Preferably for somebody who is currently in school with little tech experience?
You only work on 1 class at a time, but you have 4 classes in a term. This is way easier because this has allowed me to finish certain classes within 1-3 weeks.
This is great information regarding WGU - CyberSecurity program. Seems like gov jobs are only attainable to those who have the MASTERS degrees vs bachelors(saturated) degrees. Also, couldn't the BS degree be completed in less than 2 years and cost less than $10k? Just going off the figures WGU shows for 6-month term = $8,730(2 semesters) Let's assume I study and complete assignments giving 2 hours dedicated per day. I do agree a masters is much heavier and invaluable nowadays. I have more than a decade worth of IT professional exp focused on IT support/networking/system admin responsibilities. Would my IT exp help when applying for cybersecurity(entry-level) roles while or after attending WGU? Just some deep questions I'd like to ask from a fellow WGU graduate before I jump on the bandwagon ^_^
MBA in IT or Masters in Security for Federal sector 2210 management jobs assuming you already have years of paid IT experience, Bachelors in IT, and a Security+?
I have a bachelors but not IT related. Do u recommend I get another bachelors but in cyber from WGU or should I just go for a masters in cyber at WGU? Also, do I have to take and pass all certs included in the degree to graduate or do I only need to pass the classes to get the masters?
WGU will take University of the People credits because UoPeople are DEAC-accredited. I would suggest you at least complete your Associate degree at Upeople before transferring out.
@@Justmy4cents Thank you for your reply, I am also to planning transfer my credits at my last term at UoPeople and complete my bachelors at WGU what do you think?
Hey Nicole ... thanks for the video. I looked over the SANS pathway; they seem really expensive compared to WGU. For example, the Essentials, Advanced, and Expert are 8k + per course. If you have the time, could you do a video on why you feel a SANS may be a better route for some (if you don't already have one)? Thanks again
Yeah, SANS courses and certificates are very expensive. For individual courses, it is over 8k and another 1k for the exam. But they have the SANS Technology Institute, that have certificates and an MS. Each class is the same as the cert class, but it is 6.5k with the exam, which is still ridiculously expensive. That is why SANS focuses on getting people that either their employer or GI Bill can pay for it.
I'm 40 and circumstances have put me in a situation where i have to start over in a brand new career. I want to do a physician assistant program and I'm thinking WGU and University of New England science prerequisites. Loma Linda University will accept this plus my former career takes care of my paid healthcare experience. I'm thinking of health ans human services degree but would like to know if it would be possible to finish that in a year if a person treated it like a 12 hour a day job? also how are the tests structured?
I wouldn't recommend the military route. Its really hard to land that Navy Cyber Warfare job. Most of the time they will screw you over and make you take a different job and lie to you saying that you can change it later.
2:21 Then that’s not a proper school. Cybersecurity is not primarily about knowing what off the shelf anti- hacking software to use and pressing some keys like a virtuoso pianist following an algorithmic musical sheet. Robots can do that.
I'm currently a sophomore at Devry University and was thinking about transferring to WGU but I hear so many bad things about how you barely have any support and it's more of a diploma Mill at WGU.
@@hookedonhustle Just going by what I've heard. Getting bachelor's and master's in 8 months doesn't seem legit to anyone with a half a brain 🤣😭 but ok.
@@hookedonhustle I have to do more research. WGU was founded in 1997 so that’s extremely new for a not Degree Mill. At Devry I have support academic advisors, career advisors, and The degree is well rounded. Getting a bachelor’s in months makes WGU sound illegitimate. Anything worth accomplishing should take time and should be easy . Just my take.
You’re at a for profit school that’s been sued successfully multiple times for lying to students and about student success resulting in nearly 100 million in pay outs, but are worried about a state sponsored nonprofit public university that’s online like WGU? Just my personal experience working in big tech, and also in the same city as Nicole… DeVry is a terrible school and its legacy of poor quality graduates can impact students getting jobs. As in, the perception of the school is not great and like schools like Liberty University etc, has a stigma that can lead to your resume being automatically rejected without a lot of experience. I’m not even a fan of WGU but DeVry has such a poor track record, and there are so many better options that are cheaper and offer better outcomes it’s just a poor choice.
Anyone who thinks it is a diploma mill should try some of the WGU quizlets that students have put out there and see if they can pass them cold. Spoiler: unless you already know the material, you can't.
To get a step-by-step plan to learn the basics of Cybersecurity & IT go to nicoleenesse.com/course-list/
You should have went to the famous doctoral research university wmu (Western Michigan University) for your cybersecurity
From what I understand, instead of paying per credit hour you pay per 6 month term. If you get an IT degree, you get Comptia, Amazon, ITIL and Linux certifications included in the tuition. So not only do you get the degree but the training and certs. That's a pretty good deal.
2x Grad here - WGU is a God send. Absolutely game changer and leaps and bounds above many brick and mortar schools. I have a degree from a major b&m university as well. The price has gone up of course as all things but join now and change your life.
I don't know what university you went to, but mine was very helpful and had updated information. The alumni and internships it had were great too.
I mean, as of 2024, I think the price is pretty inexpensive compared to other trad universities.
I had an AS in graphic design. Got my BS in Cloud Computing from WGU. It landed me a great government job. WGU was so worth it. Best $9k I ever spent. I doubled my salary with my new position.
How long did it take you?
Do you use javascript in your job? or more databases and clouds?
@@mcbjvhgurl 2.5 years for the degree. I got a job 2 years after I started. So I didn't even graduate yet when I got a job.
@@romanlukichev4971 neither really. I am customer support. Think more like local specialized help desk. It pays 6 figures a year and I have a nice pension. I think I just got really lucky. But without WGU I didn't have a chance.
How is that cloud computing major? I am deciding now between cloud computing and information security & assurance. Do you think there a lot of overlap between the two? I am leaning towards cloud computing because I have been studying cybersecurity for a couple years now and have my security+ already but no luck with jobs as of yet
I just retired from working for the government, and let me tell you about how many people we have hired as contractors and even Civil Service positions who had WGU degrees. On my small base alone, more than half of the hirees were WGU graduates with BS and/or MS degrees in Cyber/CompScience and most of them finished their programs within a year. I and my counterpart were both GS-12s with no degrees making 6-figures, and we see a ton of these new folks come in and make that right off the bat. I am now in the BS-CS program for my next big tole in the Space Industry, and my counterpart is in the Cyber program to keep himself competitive enough to snag the GS-13 spot when our boss retires.
WGU is legit THE school to go through for Government jobs right now.
I currently work for the government and am enroute to enrolling in WGU. I will say that more than half the personnel in the G6 (if you know what that is) have degrees from WGU.
I recently went downstairs to talk to some of the cyber and networking personnel; they all said that it doesn't matter how you get the degree, but that you are comfortable learning. The sidenote from all of them was that if you like to get things done ASAP, go WGU.
Would they hire someone with BS in Elementary Educational Studies?
I really feel bad for anyone going to a traditional state school or private school where they have to fight for a spot in a class of 20 people, pay for books that cost as much as the class, and sit around and listen to professors who haven’t worked a real job in over 30 years talk about how much they enjoyed cyber security.
Community college lil bro
@@Vuden13 I say naw lil homie
@@RunOs3 wut
@@Vuden13 you bussin now? Aight den.
Pay for books that cost as much as the class? E-books, ever heard of them?
With that said, state schools are quite a bit better than WGU.
That Masters in Cybersecurity degree now gives you CISM, Casp, Pentest+ and Cysa+, no more CEH.
Yep its a shame.
@@cyberlocc why? CEH is garbage
@thechillmaster5836 Because CEH is expensive and it be nice to get it free.
"It's garbage" ya I hear that all the time, and that may very well be the case from an actual learning/content standpoint. However at the end of the day it is the second most requested Cyber Security Cert by HR and it's not by a small margin.
What is the value of certs to you?
Industry recognition? The Industry says they are all trash.
Learning? I don't think most of them are very practical but learning can definitely be a second.
HR? Well the CEH is king in this regard, no matter how much people don't like that.
At the End of the day the CISSP, OSCP, CEH, and Sec+ are the only certs HR cares about (and Sans) so they are the only certs that really have any value at all.
I'm enrolling right now and I super appreciate you doing these videos. It makes me feel confident going forward that my choice in WGU for an undergrad in cyber security was a good choice
Update?
Update?
@@NavyBluesandShoes I completed my first 6 month term in the Cybersecurity undergrad program. So far it is pretty great! I will outline a few things, but feel free to ask me any questions.
The course is truly self paced, the coursework feels very clear, the professors are super helpful and the platform/website has had no issues.
Once you start a term, you cannot transfer anymore credits to your degree. One loophole is that some of the classes have a single objective, attain certification x/y/z.
So I am taking a break between terms, you can take up to 5 months in between. During this time I plan on self-studying and paying for Network+ and Project+. Any certification attained will be honored for full credits toward your degree plan.
@@Vuden13 I left a comment to another person, but feel free to ask any more questions, I will pay close attention and will be happy to respond.
I completed my first term, feel free to ask me any questions.
The admin side was easy, all the classes have felt very clear, the professors are helpful, the staff and my program mentor have been fantastic.
Once you begin a term, you can no longer transfer credits to your degree, make sure get them all. There is one type of loophole to this, I will explain.
Right now I'm on term break, you may take up to 5 months in between terms as a break. During this break I am going to self-study and complete my Network+ and Project+ certs. Any certification that is acquired, no matter when, must be accepted by WGU. Many of the courses have one requirement and that is to pass a certification exam.
Feel free to ask me anything!
I graduated with my undergrad nursing degree at WGU! I actually love the school.
How long did it take you to complete and have you had any luck finding jobs?
@@adamtorres2014 Its your own pace except for the clinical parts since their on a set schedule, but a course like A&P, English Comp. can be completed in a week.
@@adamtorres2014 5 semesters and huge yes! I've had lots of nursing jobs since graduating! Great school!
Thank you for this! Your other video is what made me finally go through with the decision. I’m getting my masters in cybersecurity and information assurance as well and start March 1st.
Very cool! Im starting soon after you!!
Currently in WGU for cybersecurity studying CompTIA Core 1. So much to memorize but I hope to do good at in due time.
Same here lol
Same as well just started in February in Intro to Information Security now
Same I’m hoping to test for core one in a week or so
Cant fcking stand the A+ and I've already worked in technology.
How the clases going ? I’m starting cybersecurity to put this TS/SCI to use when I finish the associates and later bachelors eventually
Needed this video. I had a bad semester. A lot of life happened this last year making me fall back and it’s hard to keep the focus with that and my overnight 12’s. When things settle a little bit i will take the non FA semester and get back on track.
Hey you go to WGU?
I start in March 1st. I was grinding Sophia classes the past few months. Now I'm studying for the classes left to stay ahead.
I’ll be trying to same thing soon, good luck.
How old r u
Thanks for mentioning WGU. I will seriously consider it for getting my education.
Do it.
WGU cybersecurity program just got the stamp of approval from the NSA
The reason I chose WGU is because one 6 month term cost like $5k. Keiser was charging $11k (including books and fees) per 4 month semester come to find out a lot of online colleges (like snhu) charge about $450+ per credit hour. National average for a bacholars is $25-$35k. I also like being able to complete my course at a faster pace, you can finish your bacholars in about 6months or less. Also for the inspiring nurses they offer the BSN (pre-licensure) meaning you can enroll without being a nurse, you will earn you RN license while in school and do your clinincals at their partner labs in your state.
Thank you! Thank You!! Your video and the wonderful people who made comments has helped me make a decision about attending WGU and I AM! Heading to there website now.....thank you and thanks everyone else😀
I think we served together, small world huh! thanks for the content.
Aye!
I plan to start WGU for a Bachelors in Cybersecurity June 1st. I completed my Associates degree in Cybersecurity last December.
hows it going, how is the curriculum? What do you expect to gain at the end of this?
@@Chainless_Slave7 It's Going better than I expected. I only have 10 classes + 1 capstone so it's easy. I expect to gain a bachelor's degree and also a better job. Now I wfh as a cybersecurity analyst making $64k but I would like a new job in Cybersecurity paying at least $80k.
Yeah...the CISSP isn't horrible but it just feels draining. At some point you just get enough certs that you feel drained every year from getting a new one or having to get CEUs for existing ones...
Great video! I have a bachelors in liberal arts already and my full 36 months of gi bill. My plan is to knock out the masters at WGU in a year, I can then use the remaining time on SANS grad cert pathways which you can use your gi bill for (these are separate to the sans degree program and are based on learning pathways).
This is my most likely path. I am in my capstone for the MSITM, and I plan to go to SANS to get a graduate certificate with what I have left in the GIBILL.
@@angelgueosepulveda3151 yeah my goal is to land a job as a SOC analyst once I’m done with my masters, then use the sans graduate path to specialize from there based on what I want to go into since they have incident response/pentesting/cloud etc
@@DigitalHoplite I think it is a good plan. SANS have really good pathways of certifications in whatever you want to specialize. I wish you good luck on your future education.
WGI Alumni, Best decision I ever made. Graduated 10/2018, and walked in 2/2019 in Orlando, worse thing that happened is that I waited until 1/2020 to pursue a new job, and guess what happened. However, due to Bachelors in Business Administration I have received great job offers after the plandemic happened.
Wish she would get to the point 🤦🏿♂️
you sound ignorant, she structured the video well and answered a lot of questions as well
and a veteran like myself i get paid to get to school which she shows that it made it worth with that aspect
@@imbrion7981I’m starring cybersecurity associates next with with the GI bill. Do you think wgu was better than going to a college since it’s “faster”?
Reason is that a 10 min video can get more per view
She dropped alot of jewels.
There aren't many people can learn a lot of new information within six months.
Sophia Learning is also a good program to use to save time and money
I am currently attending SANS and pursuing the Bachelor's in Applied Cybersecurity. Earned my first GIAC GFACT cert in March and studying for the GISF cert next. Previously, I was a double-major in UHWO and was pursuing bachelors in cybersecurity and information security & assurance before transferring. It was when I participated in the National Cyber League competition that I heard about SANS reputation. Cheers!
I'm using some va benefits for WGU and would not recommend the cybersecurity program unless you have experience in the field. WGU does not actually have instructors despite the name given to individuals who's sole purpose is to merely provide you with links to resources. There is no break down of the material, and zero instruction. I am not sure it is entirely worth the amount of tuition they charge, given the fact that you can find much of the same resources they provide.
I think WGU is mostly ideal for people looking to switch jobs. I got a friend who got a Bachelor of Science in Cybersecurity and Information Assurance (BSCSIA) and while I'm happy for him, I don't think it was the right move.
I can't imagine employers holding online degree programs in the same regard as regular degrees, and he doesn't have any connections either. On top of these things, he obtained his degree in only one year (Provided, he tested out of a lot of classes and was not working).
I got a bachelor’s in sport management back in 2000. If I wanted to go the WGU route, would I need to get a bachelor’s of something in IT before looking to get into one of their master’s programs? I’m 47 with ZERO tech experience or knowledge. I know it’s daunting, but I am hungry and excited to learn. As I am a bit advanced in age, I need to ensure that I go with the most efficient and effective path. Any advice would be tremendously appreciated!
As an immigrant and US citizen, who has a foreign degree, I can tell you. That WGU has affordable certifications, which will cost you about 4,000 dollars. It is just a starting point, after it you will need to make your own project, and become a life long IT Learner. And maybe you land a tech job, if you put a lot of effort into it.
It depends if your brain is in the good shape!
I'm 46 and I start WGU on June 1st. You can do it.
IMHO while certifications could indeed teach you some techniques - university degree (real university study) teaches you how to think in a special way. At BSc it is one level, at engineering degree it gives you additional perspective, Master Degree gives you more academic way of thinking - where you can build your system of knowledge correctly and communicate it to the other people in the area of your specialization, PhD :) - this one is crazy and if it done correctly (even if not finished) gives you even more insight in how to think and see how details are really influencing bigger systems and how areas of technology and science really interconnected and opens your mind (again if it is done correctly and not just for degree and publications).
In some areas of study. I’ve worked with several folks who have degrees and are some of the dumbest colleagues
I got hired specifically cause I have an IT degree. I'm not a cybersecurity person, but after graduating I only had to apply for less than 2 months.
Was it from wgu? I have an associate degree in cyberscurity but can't get a call back from IT jobs to save my life
@thegeth4293 Same. I got an Associates Degree in Cybersecurity from Moraine Valley Community College. I stopped applying to jobs. Yesterday I sent WGU my transcripts because the Associates Degree counts towards the WGU Bachelors degree in Cybersecurity. I plan to start WGU June 1st.
Have you ever thought about getting a Bachelors degree?
@@Theinsomniac826 I start at WGU on May 1 for their IT degree. I'm also doing a CCNA course on udemy in the mean time. It sucks, I got my 2 year degree and can't get a job to save my life, I checked LinkedIn's analytics, and about 60% of my competition for entry level help desk jobs have a bachelor's degree
How much do you make?
It’s funny to see your channel again when I was working on my first cert now I’m in the field and looking at college… wild
Welcome back!
@@nicoleenesse 🙇♂️ thx
Please, if I finish my second semester before 6 month interval, would i be allowed to proceed to the next semester?
I know someone that got a BS in 6 months and a Masters in 3. That should answer your question.
Could you make a refreshed video of how to nail your interview for your first tech job? Preferably for somebody who is currently in school with little tech experience?
I called WGU the say they only give you one class at a time. Can you please explain
You only work on 1 class at a time, but you have 4 classes in a term. This is way easier because this has allowed me to finish certain classes within 1-3 weeks.
Just means you can’t juggle multiple classes at a time. But there’s no limit to how many you can do in a term.
What are your thoughts on completing the BSCSIA at WGU and then transferring to SANS for the Master's degree?
My long term goal is getting on with DFAS, wish my security clearance didn’t lapse like 20 years ago lol
did you get the full amount from the GI bill "monthly" or was it cut down?
This is great information regarding WGU - CyberSecurity program. Seems like gov jobs are only attainable to those who have the MASTERS degrees vs bachelors(saturated) degrees. Also, couldn't the BS degree be completed in less than 2 years and cost less than $10k? Just going off the figures WGU shows for 6-month term = $8,730(2 semesters) Let's assume I study and complete assignments giving 2 hours dedicated per day. I do agree a masters is much heavier and invaluable nowadays. I have more than a decade worth of IT professional exp focused on IT support/networking/system admin responsibilities. Would my IT exp help when applying for cybersecurity(entry-level) roles while or after attending WGU?
Just some deep questions I'd like to ask from a fellow WGU graduate before I jump on the bandwagon ^_^
Is it worth it for someone who isnt currently in the tech field? I love tech, but my local university has no tech degrees
Your point of not getting the CISSP is kinda on your end. Looking like external locus over on this channel.
i'm doing the bachelors in software engineering. i'd say WGU gives you the foundational knowledge but outside learning is required
Really appreciate your sharing. It was helpful to me. God bless you❤❤❤
Thumbs down for click bait title
Did you use the Gi Bill Im Looking to use mine will they give me housing allowance for it since it sonline or does that not matter?
I’m about to start my undergrad with wgu and i work full time. How long will it take me to get a business degree? I have no college at all.
SANS masters is a waste of the GI Bill
MBA in IT or Masters in Security for Federal sector 2210 management jobs assuming you already have years of paid IT experience, Bachelors in IT, and a Security+?
Just get CISSP or CASP and you can get GS-12+. But if you absolutely need that degree, go Cyber.
I have a bachelors but not IT related. Do u recommend I get another bachelors but in cyber from WGU or should I just go for a masters in cyber at WGU?
Also, do I have to take and pass all certs included in the degree to graduate or do I only need to pass the classes to get the masters?
Thank you! How fast do you think someone could go through the bachelors program while working slightly more than full time?
Yes, but probably not in six months
I'm currently studying BSCS at UoPeople and I'm thinking to transfer credits to WGU just to get WGU Degree can I do it?
WGU will take University of the People credits because UoPeople are DEAC-accredited. I would suggest you at least complete your Associate degree at Upeople before transferring out.
@@Justmy4cents Thank you for your reply, I am also to planning transfer my credits at my last term at UoPeople and complete my bachelors at WGU what do you think?
Hey Nicole ... thanks for the video. I looked over the SANS pathway; they seem really expensive compared to WGU. For example, the Essentials, Advanced, and Expert are 8k + per course. If you have the time, could you do a video on why you feel a SANS may be a better route for some (if you don't already have one)? Thanks again
only if you have the GIBILL
Yeah, SANS courses and certificates are very expensive. For individual courses, it is over 8k and another 1k for the exam. But they have the SANS Technology Institute, that have certificates and an MS. Each class is the same as the cert class, but it is 6.5k with the exam, which is still ridiculously expensive. That is why SANS focuses on getting people that either their employer or GI Bill can pay for it.
IS it better to go straight for the masters or bac?
Actually Companies just need a degree, regardless of what it is.
Uhh.. accountant?
@@assassin7250 No , but I've been in enough places where people hang their degrees that have nothing to do with their jobs
Any masters is not worth it unless it’s in the medical field
SANS is expensive af lol
Is WGU good for beginners to IT
yes this school has been a nightmare. And because i'm using VR@E I'm stuck with it now.
Go somewhere else
I'm 40 and circumstances have put me in a situation where i have to start over in a brand new career. I want to do a physician assistant program and I'm thinking WGU and University of New England science prerequisites. Loma Linda University will accept this plus my former career takes care of my paid healthcare experience. I'm thinking of health ans human services degree but would like to know if it would be possible to finish that in a year if a person treated it like a 12 hour a day job? also how are the tests structured?
loma linda hella expensive
I've been thinking about WGU Online or Navy Cyber Warfare Technician
What would you recommend?
I wouldn't recommend the military route. Its really hard to land that Navy Cyber Warfare job. Most of the time they will screw you over and make you take a different job and lie to you saying that you can change it later.
@@derekchamreun3939is this what you’ve experienced? Or just 2nd and 3rd hand information?
😅🤣
@@abefromen1 Speaking from personal experience. But who knows maybe you’ll be luckier than me.
@@abefromen1 Happened to my brother in the Navy. Air Force is the better branch for cyber security anyway.
The Market is flooded with Cheap Labor Information Technology workers from india, locals are being deprived jobs.
2:21 Then that’s not a proper school. Cybersecurity is not primarily about knowing what off the shelf anti- hacking software to use and pressing some keys like a virtuoso pianist following an algorithmic musical sheet. Robots can do that.
Ong
Thanks So Much for this video.
Great video what is Sands im curious to know
The GRE is super easy
My only regret is watching this video
going to enroll
100% worth it
I'm currently a sophomore at Devry University and was thinking about transferring to WGU but I hear so many bad things about how you barely have any support and it's more of a diploma Mill at WGU.
lol you’re at a Degree mill and think WGU is one too? No… it’s not.
@@hookedonhustle Just going by what I've heard. Getting bachelor's and master's in 8 months doesn't seem legit to anyone with a half a brain 🤣😭 but ok.
@@hookedonhustle I have to do more research. WGU was founded in 1997 so that’s extremely new for a not Degree Mill. At Devry I have support academic advisors, career advisors, and The degree is well rounded. Getting a bachelor’s in months makes WGU sound illegitimate. Anything worth accomplishing should take time and should be easy . Just my take.
You’re at a for profit school that’s been sued successfully multiple times for lying to students and about student success resulting in nearly 100 million in pay outs, but are worried about a state sponsored nonprofit public university that’s online like WGU?
Just my personal experience working in big tech, and also in the same city as Nicole… DeVry is a terrible school and its legacy of poor quality graduates can impact students getting jobs. As in, the perception of the school is not great and like schools like Liberty University etc, has a stigma that can lead to your resume being automatically rejected without a lot of experience.
I’m not even a fan of WGU but DeVry has such a poor track record, and there are so many better options that are cheaper and offer better outcomes it’s just a poor choice.
Anyone who thinks it is a diploma mill should try some of the WGU quizlets that students have put out there and see if they can pass them cold. Spoiler: unless you already know the material, you can't.
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WGU is Fantastic! Great video ✌🏽😎
Playback speed 1.5… sry I’m impatient
3x
0:46 Really?… 😃
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You make this video all the time. Move on already
3 mins into the video and zero information on any update about wgu. Video downvoted. Waste of time.
Is WGU woke?
Not in my experience
You talk too damn much
I say this with love, please color your hair. The grey ages you at least 10+ years. You have a beautiful face the grey is not fitting.
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