bke1984
Helluva Engineer
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I got an MS in Statistics just after undergrad. Most of the coursework wasn’t any harder than the undergrad work, and honestly just built on a lot of concepts I had already learned. But I did have to take two PhD level math courses that were easily the two most challenging classes I encountered during all of my studies. These classes assumed a background in math that I had simply never been exposed to, which made them basically impossible. I worked hard and somehow passed with a curved B in each, but honestly I’m not sure how given how poorly I performed on the exams.This is off-topic but I am wondering (from those of you who have master's degrees) just how much more difficult grad school is than undergrad. In my former life, i worked with a number of engineers (not all from Tech) who got MBA's from Ga. State in the evenings. To a person, they all said the undergrad work was much more difficult. What made the evening MBA program challenging was doing it while also working, having a wife/kids and taking care of their household responsibilities.
I agree with @PapaFoxtrot....if you can juggle FB while getting a Tech diploma in 3 years or so it doesn't seem like grad school would be much of a leap. Am I wrong about this?
Generally speaking I think those that choose grad school are likely to succeed, as you’re already likely someone who knows how to work hard to achieve success.