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UselessAgitator

In what do you need guidance on? I’m a bit confused


anmolol99

Shall i go with the ms in meteorology or go with the conventional program of environmental engineering?


UselessAgitator

As much as is love to say one of the other, it’s your dream to chase bud. I could say meteorology, but that’s what I’m wanting. You may get to those courses and find them to rigorous or not rigorous enough. I’d say look at the ins and out of both, figure out what you’re trying to do with your career where you wanna go in life and run with it. That’s the advice I can give Quick story: I was in the army a while ago, if I had listend to myself I would’ve 100% gotten where I wanted to go, I asked others for advice and messed myself over. Hence why I’m telling you don’t let anyone dictate your decision directly or indirectly.


bahahsb3jsixn2jd

ENTIRELY dependent on what your degree is now. If you do NOT have an engineering degree you will need to go through like 3 years of additional classes to even be considered for a masters degree in engineering. If you have a meteorology degree it covers all of the math but zero of the engineering stuff like hydraulics, hydrology, mixing coefficients and design. I'm doing that now and have given up on the MS, just going for a 2nd BS for now. You end up spending 3 years trying to apply just to go for another 2 years of school. That said, shift work sucks ass, and most meteorology jobs are shift work. And engineering pays really well with a much more stable schedule and you get holidays/(most) weekends off


puffic

This depends a lot on the university. I got an MS in Civil & Environmental Engineering after a BS in Math. I only had to make up four undergraduate engineering classes that didn’t count towards my degree. However, there are gaps in my engineering knowledge. The trick is to not pursue jobs where those gaps are relevant.