Really cool video. I only need the CISM to get all certs required to smoke half the degree. And based on your insights the other half can be done in one term. If you take 2-3 weeks per class on those who require only a paper it means that in 2 to 2 and half months you finished 3 classes and have close to 4 months to work on the class with paper and test and the capstone. That is super doable. Thanks for the time taken to provide this information, I'm now really considering going for the CISM with the help of my employer (at least 50% of the cost) and then getting the degree.
Id adjust the lighting Brighter,and maybe add something to your back round so it’s not just a blank wall? That’s just me I’d get the lighting to where you don’t have a shadow in the back round and adjust the camera to where I don’t see the corner of the wall
I have a B.S. in psychology and currently making the transition over into tech. Currently enrolled in Google cybersecurity program to learn the basics. Thinking about enrolling in WGU but don’t know if I should get another Bachelors or Masters could any body give me some insight or path recommendations?
If you already have a BS, get a Masters. Plus, if you need financial aid you can’t use it for another BS but you can use it for a Masters or Terminal Degree…
Hi, was not clear to me from your video if I transfer in CompTIA PenTest+ do I still need to write a paper for D484 Penetration Testing or the 4 credits are granted?
Brother I am doing my Bachelor in Criminology and Police Science. Which is not tech bachelor. But I have a entry level certification of Cybersecurity. Is it possible to get any scholarship in WGU (specially for my condition) ?
You keep saying for some of these classes you just need to write a paper. Ok but how many pages for each paper? Cause dam I’m not good at bs’ing for 50 pages.🤦🏿♂️
do you recommend this degree for someone with no tech background who seeks a career change? I have a bachelors in biology looking to get into cybersecurity and thinking of pursuing this program to obtain both the certifications/education in one go and break into the industry. How difficult do you think it would be to complete this in 1-2 terms if so? TIA
Cyber is a hard field to break into. A Masters and a bunch of certs could work, if you try your first job maybe something more IT. Honestly it’s hard for me to give an opinion on this. I would try to look up some videos and reddit posts on what a cybersecurity analyst does everyday and see if that’s something you’d like to do. If you want to do it, go for it. You can also check out the Data Analytics Masters as Data Analysts would be easier to break into.
I’m already enrolled to get my Cybersecurity bachelors, how viable would it be to get a second Cloud Computing bachelors from WGU to go along with it and seek for those Cloud Security roles in the future?
I personally would never recommend getting two bachelors, especially in essentially adjacent fields such as IT and Cyber. You'd be better off going for a master's after your bachelor's if you really feel the need. Especially since it's shorter at one to two years. A master's could compliment your bachelor's in Cybersecurity, something in IT, business, etc. But you might not even really need it.
I don't like the new setup. You're too close to the mic and the audio is clipping. In your video below the audio was perfect: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-9byyQsY4soM.htmlsi=GzoKz3UfF7zY92zW
Your mic is WAAAAY too hot. Turn that gain down! And here's a tip: Do a recording before your video and see how it sounds. You are clipping, which is nearly impossible to do on this mic, but somehow you managed it. Sensitivity is wayyyy to high.