Throwing in my two sense after seeing almost an entire graduating class get deported last December. MIS is the correct path as the MSBA is being replaced with Data Engineers. Unless you hold citizenship you won’t land a job in time with the MSBA. For schools you want to go the public route because they get more funding than B list private. For example I took a class at what was once a good b list private school in Chicago. In 2022 we were using SQL 2012 because the private university lacked the funding to upgrade their technology. Excel was from 2016. We were using WEKA and Tableau rather than learning Python and R for cleansing and transformation. That summer I took a class at a public 2 year and even they taught R and Python. I ended up transferring out to SUNY. If you can get into a top ten then private is fine but it’ll cost a fortune ie 100,000’s of US dollars. The best schools are on the east and west coasts. California, Washington, New York, Massachusetts, North Carolina, South Carolina, New Jersey, Ect. The closer you get to the central states the worse the education gets and you need to know what your talking about to land a job. The degree by itself isn’t enough to land the job because employers frequently outsource to China if the overseas applicant demonstrates better proficiency than the candidate pool. That’s the biggest downside in the united states. The competition. You are pitted against the best in the world when you look for a job and if you don’t land it in six months you face deportation. Literally saw an entire class spend 60k on a MSBA and none of those guys landed jobs. Every single one but like two guys are back home with a mountain of debt.
Do you have some idea about the University of Cincinnati's MIS program? I have got an admit from that college and I don't know if I should leave it and go over UIUC's IM program! Your opinion is appreciated. Thanks
Throwing in my two sense after seeing almost an entire graduating class get deported last December. MIS is the correct path as the MSBA is being replaced with Data Engineers. Unless you hold citizenship you won’t land a job in time with the MSBA. For schools you want to go the public route because they get more funding than B list private. For example I took a class at what was once a good b list private school in Chicago. In 2022 we were using SQL 2012 because the private university lacked the funding to upgrade their technology. Excel was from 2016. We were using WEKA and Tableau rather than learning Python and R for cleansing and transformation. That summer I took a class at a public 2 year and even they taught R and Python. I ended up transferring out to SUNY. If you can get into a top ten then private is fine but it’ll cost a fortune ie 100,000’s of US dollars. The best schools are on the east and west coasts. California, Washington, New York, Massachusetts, North Carolina, South Carolina, New Jersey, Ect. The closer you get to the central states the worse the education gets and you need to know what your talking about to land a job. The degree by itself isn’t enough to land the job because employers frequently outsource to China if the overseas applicant demonstrates better proficiency than the candidate pool. That’s the biggest downside in the united states. The competition. You are pitted against the best in the world when you look for a job and if you don’t land it in six months you face deportation. Literally saw an entire class spend 60k on a MSBA and none of those guys landed jobs. Every single one but like two guys are back home with a mountain of debt.
Hi namitha. Can you tell me what subjects are included in ur curriculum of MIS?
(I am from IT background) I am not good in programming and I have 0 years experience. What suits best for me msba or mis or any other course?
I am very much interested in business side if you can help
@@shivammehta6815 did u figure it out? I have the same question
Out of context Your voice is still soothing
Mam can u please suggest a stem course which don't have more coding and all please
Do you have some idea about the University of Cincinnati's MIS program? I have got an admit from that college and I don't know if I should leave it and go over UIUC's IM program! Your opinion is appreciated. Thanks
I went to TAMU, Mays Business School. I don’t know about UCinn. Good luck! 🍀