Engineering programs in midwest

<p>mwlgal,</p>

<p>It’s true that some schools don’t even allow you to apply for their undergrad program when you already have a degree from another college. They’d tell you to apply for a master program (either their own or somewhere else if they don’t have it). </p>

<p>I was considering to get a second BS in acturial science at one point; I actually wanted a master program but not many schools with the locations I want to be at have act sci programs. I called a school and they told me i should go somewhere else because they don’t have a master program; they thought I shouldn’t be an undergrad again when I already graduated from another college.</p>

<p>I know it may feel unnatural to go for a master when you don’t have a bachelor in the field to begin with. But a lot of master programs these days don’t assume you do. Some ask you to take more credits than your peers; others may even have a summer session to let you catch up with the pre-reqs. I am doing master in accounting now but my prior degrees are all in engineering. If possible, getting a master is more benificiall. Most colleges would require you to stay for 2 years to get their bachelor degree. A master degree takes about the same amount of time or even shorter yet it carries more weight.</p>