is my undergrad insufficient???

<p>What is your personal opinion of this degree combo? Is it weak or is it a good combo? I am into doing process improvement.</p>

<p>Johns Hopkins University* ******
Whiting School of Engineering************************
Master of Science, Technical Management********* *********
Certificate: Systems Engineering</p>

<p>University of Houston********************************
Bachelor of Science, Supply Chain & Logistics Technology*******
Concentration: Operations Engineering
Certificate: Six Sigma Green Belt</p>

<p>You were already accepted to the program at JHU, so obviously they (an actual admissions team more equipped than we strangers) think so. Also, you said you were doing this MS for career advancement in your current job, so it’s not like you have to worry about finding a job after the program. What is your worry other than that?</p>

<p>Just looking for an opinion from someone other than chucktown. I am also debating looking for a new job.</p>

<p><strong><em>Putting on my recruiting hat</em></strong></p>

<p>Does position require a M.S. degree?..yes/no
Does candidate have M.S. degree?..Yes
Does candidate have B.S. degree in related field?..Yes</p>

<p>Ok…the 30 seconds of education background checking is out of the way…</p>

<p>WHERE IS THE EXPERIENCE??</p>

<p>I also think I am uncomfortable with the word technology in my undergrad.</p>

<p>OK…I do have a comment.</p>

<p>After looking at the John Hopkins site, a SysE certificate is 6 courses, but a full M.S. is 10. I would personally take SysE as the M.S. and include 2 or 3 elective Technical Management courses in the degree. Both areas have a project management option. Why not the M.S. Systems Engineering with the Project Management focus??</p>