| What country are you in now? The difference between mechanical and electrical engineering is huge. Why do you want to do either? In your last paragraph you are also considering computer science. You need to decide which degree you actually want and why. What will you be able to do with a degree that you can't do now? I can only speak for the US but I would look at college curriculums and look at the actual classes you need to take. Many public universities in the US have partnerships with community colleges where you can take many general education classes from the first 2 years and get the credits to transfer. I have an electrical engineering degree and there were labs in some classes but others had none. Maybe when you get to that point you can work part time or with flexible hours and go to those classes during the day a few times a week and work during the night. All of this means you are going to have a big change in your life. That could be cheaper housing, cheaper vacations, less time for a personal life, etc. |
Really it just boils down to I've always been enchanted by engineering but never had the ability to due to having to work to make money to keep going. I'm considering computer science just because it would be easier to do while working and recently I've heard it's cheaper.
I do have a 2 years at a community college but most of the credits won't count which is why I said "no degree" but you're right, I can transfer some.