A list of puns related to "Norwich University"
Looking to get my Masters online through them. Anyone on here went that route? If it helps, Iβm going for the Masters in History with a concentration in Constitutional and Legal studies. Thanks!
Edit: For clarity, is it a good school? Look decent on a resume? Any issues with instructors not accommodating service related stuff, etc.
"Letter" has case details. "Resolution" is the agreement with the school.
TIX coordinator:
OCR concludes TIX coordinator wrongly rejected the toxicology report.
OCR notes that the witness who recanted didn't just recant, but admitted to coordinating, she:
>admitted to being biased against the complainant, and disclosed that she and the student coordinated a written statement to the investigator
Which is ironic because described the witness as "very credible" and "neutral":
>Witness 4, whom the investigator found βhad no evident bias or motive to fabricate and is a very credible witnessβ and βwas invested in maintaining neutrality and conveying as much information as she could accurately recall in an unbiased manner.β
OCR takes a final note criticizing the schools policy regarding the use of what I assume is a drug:
>In addition, OCR is concerned that the University provides amnesty for complainants and witnesses who provide self-incriminating testimony regarding personal use of XXXXXX, but not to respondents who engage in similar personal use, based on the Title IX Coordinatorβs correspondence with Witness 4 and the language of the Universityβs policy on this issue.
My first choice college would be USNA, however if I donβt make it in I would like to go to either Norwich or The Citadel for a year and reapply to USNA. I recently toured both colleges and was a bit disappointed with both tours (Norwich didnβt show as much of the ROTC side as I would have hoped and the Citadel didnβt show us in any buildings nor show us much of the academic side). Do yβall have any opinions on which would be better for me?
I am going to be a junior this autumn, engineering major. Now I am deciding where to live: Norwich flats or university village?
Norwich flats: close to campus, yet slightly more expensive monthly rent for smaller spaces, trying to share a unit with others for a 4 bed room or 3 bed room. Monthly rent around $1000 + utilities
University Village: have to take bus because it is not walkable distance from campus, more space as you have your own kitchen and living room. Monthly rent $800 + utilities
Anybody can share your opinions will be much appreciated!
Online master's degrees are growing in popularity as many working professionals see them as a means of gaining an extra credential without the liability of leaving the workforce full-time. Norwich University's College of Graduate Studies has an online Master of Civil Engineering program that's quite popular among working engineers. I did this program 2015-2017 and here is my unbiased review:
#PROS:
This program is designed to be GI Bill-friendly. If you're a veteran, working full-time, and you want to use the Post-9/11 GI Bill, Norwich's master's program is likely your best bet. I've crunched the numbers, and per my math, if you have the full GI Bill, you'll pay nothing out of pocket AND you'll make over $15,000 from the monthly allowances and books. You'll also have enough time left in the Post-9/11 Bill for another master's if you want. On top of that, you don't have to buy books: they include the cost of books in the tuition and just mail you them at the beginning of each term. At least for the structural concentration, several of these books are required references for the PE, so that's excellent preparation if you haven't taken it yet. If you already have the references, you can sell the unused books on eBay and Amazon and make around another thousand or so. I'm not kidding, these books are pricey.
If you have a background in engineering, but no background in structural design, this program is a good option. They cover all the essentials of structural design: steel, concrete, timber, structural analysis, and finite element method. You'll use the design standards that professional engineers use on their day-to-day job. The professors were good at providing us with notes, problem-solving strategies, etc. For example, for the timber design class, our professor gave us stacks and stacks of practice problems and solutions. If you did all the problems and studied all the notes, you were virtually guaranteed an A in the course. It was also great preparation for the structural depth portion of the PE Exam (which I breezed through in 2017.)
It's 100% manageable to work full-time and do this program. This is arguably the best advantage to Norwich or most any online program. When you're deciding between entering the workforce and attending graduate school full-time, the main concern is often opportunity cost: how much money would you be making if you remained in the wo
Last week I received my acceptance letter from Norwich University for the cybersecurity program. I have already accepted the offer and I will start classes in January. I have so many thoughts and questions, so I created this subreddit to help answer some of the questions I have.
My questions:
I have signed for the Computer forensics and vulnerability management track, I did this because I believe this is the more technical concentration, but I am not completely sure... What are the core differences between this and the information warfare track?
How challenging are the technical classes?
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