Anonymous wrote:
Thanks for posting! I'm looking into this program right now (I'm not the OP). Am I too old at 35? Was it a good investment for you considering the cost at $50K? Once you found your job, did you find the hours to be family friendly? People seem to caution against the hours when starting in the accounting field.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure how all these postings about big 4 consulting are going to be to the OP. Unfortunately, those firms almost exclusively recruit grads straight out of the same 4-5 schools.
More than 4-5 schools, but I don't think they hire anyone with a degree received online. When I was in the OP's situation, at the age of 29, I enrolled into the GWU's Master of Accountancy program and studied full time. I had 4-5 classes a week, and at least half of them started in the evenings when my husband was already home from work and could watch the kids. It took me 15 months to graduate, including my summer internship with a Big4 firm, and I started working full time for that firm immediately after the graduation.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. My husband is deployed so i don't have the luxury of full time or evening classes.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. My husband is deployed so i don't have the luxury of full time or evening classes.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure how all these postings about big 4 consulting are going to be to the OP. Unfortunately, those firms almost exclusively recruit grads straight out of the same 4-5 schools.
Anonymous wrote:Isn't it more respectable to continue learning new things while looking for work? I don't see why it wouldn't be a good idea for OP to go back to school if she needs to change fields. A lot of traditional schools have online programs identical to on campus. An online degree from Penn State or George Mason is 100% different than an overpriced diploma mill ( U of Phoenix, Walden, Capella).
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure how all these postings about big 4 consulting are going to be to the OP. Unfortunately, those firms almost exclusively recruit grads straight out of the same 4-5 schools. Not saying that OP wouldn't be great at the gig, just that the recruiting process is not really designed for someone in her situation.
Anonymous wrote:How does someone get into IT cybersecurity without a prior background in it? I have an international relations BA and have been doing admin work since I graduated in 2010 since (all of the international relations jobs I considered wanted at least a master's degree).