JDMurray wrote: » You are very lucky that your employer's tuition assistance program covers SANS training and GIAC certification. Most tuition assistance programs limit payment and reimbursement to only courses taken at CHEA accredited places of learning, such as community colleges and universities. Most technical colleges and training centers are excluded unless individually approved by the program. You will get far more career mileage out of the CISSP than any of the GIAC certs, so give budget priority to what you think it will take for you to pass the CISSP exam. And have you considered the GCIA to round out your GCIH and (future) GPEN?
jplee3 wrote: » Do you think it's worth taking one of those CISSP prep courses?
ptilsen wrote: » I would definitely get an accredited degree over SANS. CMU offers a 100% online MS IA. I would get that instead, no question. SANS is not regionally accredited. CMU is ranked #1 in the world for IT management education. The GIAC certs and SANS training have a lot of value, but the MSISE is not the right career move IMO.
jplee3 wrote: » Tuition costs seem fairly high for CMU's INI program: 20k per semester?
NetworkVeteran wrote: » That does seem high. Did you miscalculate their rates? 15 credit-hours/semester x $477/credit-hour = $7,155 per semester Additionally, many universities and government programs offer grants and/or loans, in particular if you are in financial need or have demonstrated academic talent.
NetworkVeteran wrote: » Aha! Good find. I was looking at their MS IA, the one Paul had mentioned. From their INI FAQ, "Most graduates entering the program receive some assistance in the form of a tuition scholarship." Most universities don't want "It costs too much!" to be a serious deterrant for determined students. Here's one they offer-- "Scholarship for Service (SFS) program gives students scholarship funds in exchange for service in the federal government for a period equivalent to the length of their scholarship, typically two years." Good luck with your choices.
ptilsen wrote: » What is your undergrad? I haven't looked, but I doubt that is a requirement for most. I bet they would take any BS and some IT or business BAs. Work experience can easily make up for a non-ideal undergrad for these programs.
jplee3 wrote: » Oh I was looking off this site:Tuition "The tuition rate for students entering INI programs in Fall 2012 has been established at $19,450 per semester. (Note: the part-time tuition rate is $540/unit.)" I guess I missed the part in parens
jplee3 wrote: » I'm interested in how SFS works - what exactly does "service in the federal government" mean too? That wouldn't be full-time service would it?
NetworkVeteran wrote: » From my reading yesterday, it simply means you take a full-time internship or job with the federal government. The apparent goal is to encourage America's brightest to take federal positions, even though the pay is less than private industry would provide. Still, if your degree increases your pay rate significantly, two years of making more than you do now but less than you would with your degree aren't such a poor deal, especially when those two years are gaining you experience. You'd have to check the details.