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distance mechanical engineering

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ilaria85

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hello to all, I'm already a graduate in mechanical engineering and would like to enroll in the specialist degree but now I'm working. Does anyone know distance courses? most universities offer three-year courses but not specialists!
 
Hello I am an industrial expert and I can tell you that I was contacted ca cepu which offered me a degree in specialized mechanical engineering with the atheneum e-campus. Another body that often contacts me is the telematic university marconi which has a convention with the national college of industrial experts. the marconi is based in roma, while the e-campus has the headquarters in milan and the national detachments of which one in roma. I'm sorry, but I don't know how to tell you that I didn't really deepen my speech because the cost scared me, and then I don't really like their "you sign up and in 5 years you're an engineer" :confused: as between the lines I think they say "compati la graduation". I hope I was useful.
 
Thank you, I've verified that the industrial engineering specialist exists at marconi. I'm going to quit it a priori because I know they want a lot of money and don't help you at all!
 
Good morning to all
I am a student of mechanical engineering of distance courses of the Turin Polytechnic. They are big and work in the aerospace industry. for obvious reasons of work I cannot attend but I assure you that, apart from the distance, I find myself very well torino because there is a great relationship between student and professor. This is not happening in most Tuscan universities.
Hi.
 
Good morning to all
I am a student of mechanical engineering of distance courses of the Turin Polytechnic. They are big and work in the aerospace industry. for obvious reasons of work I cannot attend but I assure you that, apart from the distance, I find myself very well torino because there is a great relationship between student and professor. This is not happening in most Tuscan universities.
Hi.
but do you go straight to the pro torino?
 
No, I'm going to the point and that's the only disadvantage, but I'm really excited to be enrolled in this faculty. thinks everything is extremely well organized. You know two months ahead of time, time and exam room. If that were any changes, an email is notified to you and if the change is after 24 hours before the exam, they send you a text. This is just an example and I could make you many more. one last thing; in Tuscany it works so in most universities: The exam is there but you do not know where, when and with whom. For an unknown reason, the examination may be postponed or worse anticipated. the warnings are on leaflets flying to the mercy of those who pass!
 
So, if I get it right, study at home and then go to the test.
the material that gives you to study how it is? you find yourself well, are dispensers or downloadable notes. . .it must not be easy, for example, to do exercises without having a prof that teaches you:confused:
 
Yeah, I'm studying at home, and I'm going to go get my exams. actually it is not easy without following lessons. Sometimes I have taken private repetitions, especially for the first year where there are subjects such as mathematics, physics and chemistry that are really tough. against professors are very available what does not happen elsewhere. Polytechnics are already training to record lessons so that students can download from the portal all lessons to prepare for the best exam.
the material available on the net is often more than enough to pass the exam.
I find myself very well and between work, family commitments I can give 3 exams a year.
Hi.
 
one last thing visits the website studentspolito.it and you will see the comments of students of normal courses and those at a distance
 
but at marconi there is a distance degree in mechanical engineering?
I don't think so. .
 
there is industrial engineering, it is the same thing because the class is always lm-33, the same as mechanics.
 
I'm about to graduate 32 years at three. I resumed my studies at 27 swinging studio and work and I finally got to the finish line. I'm considering whether to continue because I wonder how much a master's degree can be spent at 35 years. Would anyone have any unpassioned advice to give me? maximum sincerity please.
 
I am pleased to meet you,

a degree is always a degree; and I think you should not confuse the study with work.

you study because you want to know; who studies because maybe he thinks he'll make his fortune with that title of study is wrong. think of how many people choose university paths that do not collide for nothing with their aspirations or attitudes for the above mentioned reason and therefore how they can one day sacrifice in the name of their profession if behind everything is not present the engine of "passion".

So I think you don't have to ask yourself "how much a 35-year-old degree can be sent" but you have to ask yourself "what do I want for me? "

if you then throw it on the practical side of safety on the future work in this case you should read the number of "mechanical today" of December in which in the editorial in addition to the various comments on the crisis is mentioned that the industries need technical graduates that today no longer exist.

Moreover if while studying works naturally accumulate experience and then you at 35 years old will be an engineer already trained and with work experience behind me and believe me companies look a lot at this.

the study as I repeat is a personal thing and in any case to end goliardially I point out that I live near the province of the stop (the country of the great brands of footwear) and here the engineers who design the presses to print our euro go around with the doblò while those who have the media license and a shoe factory go around with the ferrari but they both live peacefully their lives.... so....continue

p.s. I hope you decide to continue (lucky):wink:
 
I'm begging you to tell me that I'm completely in agreement with jumpy, you have to do it because you feel important to you and not to others! I already work in the technical office of a company, the master's degree would not give me any extra title nor much less an increase in salary. I decided to resume my studies because I feel I've left things halfway and for me it would be a huge satisfaction to be able to graduate despite the thousand commitments I have. my desire to study came back when in June I made repetitions to a boy who had to do the maturity as a mechanical expert, and taking back those things I rediscovered the passion for those topics that I had so loved, but finished the three-year-old was more tired to study than the passion for doing it, and I stopped. Now that I've done 2 years of "religious" from the studio, I've taken a great time putting all the passion I have. advice? if you are tired stopped a few months before enrolling, but know that the more rusty time passes. . .
Good luck with graduation, think of that in the meantime! ! !
 

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