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ENEB New Master Thread - Printable Version +- Online Degrees and CLEP and DSST Exam Prep Discussion (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb) +-- Forum: Main Category (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Forum-Main-Category) +--- Forum: Graduate School Discussion (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Forum-Graduate-School-Discussion) +--- Thread: ENEB New Master Thread (/Thread-ENEB-New-Master-Thread) |
RE: ENEB New Master Thread - bjcheung77 - 05-17-2025 Yes, probably, ECE might evaluate it as an undergraduate bachelors degree, but may come in as RA equivalent. Hmm... RE: ENEB New Master Thread - cacoleman1983 - 05-17-2025 IEE did a double penalty for CLEA. It is a Mexican propio validating a continuing education program's Spanish propio. They didn't give it a Masters equivalent because it is a Master Titulo Propio that lists the 1600 hour equivalent (64 ECTS / 1 Year) from Spain. Then, since CLEA is from Mexico and the stated program was not listed in RUCT, it does not have RVOE which means it is an unaccredited program. This evaluation shows that IEE evaluates Mexican propios and Spanish propios slighty different. Mexican propios are unaccredited programs from accredited institutions while Spanish propios are graduate certificates. All things considered, this is still a pretty good evaluation for continuing education with graduate hours that can count somewhere. RE: ENEB New Master Thread - lincolnlawyer - 05-18-2025 (05-17-2025, 04:49 PM)cacoleman1983 Wrote: IEE did a double penalty for CLEA. It is a Mexican propio validating a continuing education program's Spanish propio. They didn't give it a Masters equivalent because it is a Master Titulo Propio that lists the 1600 hour equivalent (64 ECTS / 1 Year) from Spain. Then, since CLEA is from Mexico and the stated program was not listed in RUCT, it does not have RVOE which means it is an unaccredited program. I've been wondering about this for quite a long time. Some evaluation agencies seem to suggest that a graduate certificate in the US is issued as a continuing education program, and hence is not subject to accreditation. Is that accurate? I had some credits that spilled over from my master's and I ended up getting a graduate certificate for them. I've been told by the awarding university (a state university) and a few institutions in the US and UK that the credits on my graduate certificate can count as formal credits for credit transfer. Doesn't that mean the intensity of the coursework is identical to a degree program? If so, wouldn't the categorization of "continuing education" diminish the validity of those credits? RE: ENEB New Master Thread - cacoleman1983 - 05-18-2025 (05-18-2025, 02:05 AM)lincolnlawyer Wrote:A graduate certificate can mean several things depending on the context and country. Here in the US, it is a short program for professional level graduate courses that can potentially transfer to Master’s degrees. In other countries, it can be considered undergraduate level, usually the final year (honors year) of a Bachelors degree.(05-17-2025, 04:49 PM)cacoleman1983 Wrote: IEE did a double penalty for CLEA. It is a Mexican propio validating a continuing education program's Spanish propio. They didn't give it a Masters equivalent because it is a Master Titulo Propio that lists the 1600 hour equivalent (64 ECTS / 1 Year) from Spain. Then, since CLEA is from Mexico and the stated program was not listed in RUCT, it does not have RVOE which means it is an unaccredited program.I've been wondering about this for quite a long time. Some evaluation agencies seem to suggest that a graduate certificate in the US is issued as a continuing education program, and hence is not subject to accreditation. Is that accurate? A certificate of completion for graduate courses can be a graduate certificate but not necessarily required to be official. This is why some evaluators give no degree equivalency but will acknowledge the credits as official graduate credit. I don’t think labeling these as continuing education diminishes the value of the certificates because regardless of how they are viewed, it is continuing education rather they are given academic credit or not. The level of difficulty of these courses are determined by the institution and professors. You may do close to zero work for courses and still get credit while other programs could be rigorous with no academic credit awarded. RE: ENEB New Master Thread - huiwh1998 - 05-18-2025 Until now, there is still no "top-up" program for UI1/ENEB grads evaluated by IEE as a graduate certificate for a master's. Either they cost too much, or it takes too much time... RE: ENEB New Master Thread - nofiox - 05-22-2025 Passed agile methodology master on April 6th, received the digital diplomas on April 7th, ordered physical copies on April 22nd, received Isabel I diploma May 13th. Received email of confirmation of hard copies being produced on May 22nd with ETA of conclusion and shopping of 90-120 days. Well, as smooth as it gets for someone who wasn't anxious or dependent on this. RE: ENEB New Master Thread - panda02 - 05-22-2025 (05-22-2025, 08:42 AM)nofiox Wrote: Passed agile methodology master on April 6th, received the digital diplomas on April 7th, ordered physical copies on April 22nd, received Isabel I diploma May 13th. Received email of confirmation of hard copies being produced on May 22nd with ETA of conclusion and shopping of 90-120 days. Thats very smooth tbh, it doesn't get any faster. I have to wait over 3 weeks for Digital diploma, and 3 Months for Isabel I diploma. Congrats!! RE: ENEB New Master Thread - akr680 - 05-23-2025 How long would it take to complete Master degree from ENEB? ENEB New Master Thread - NotJoeBiden - 05-23-2025 ![]()
RE: ENEB New Master Thread - ClayJ - 05-27-2025 I've just received my diploma from ENEB, I've originally enrolled with "Double Master's" option (MBA+ Master in Big Data) - to my surprise I've received just 1 diploma from ENEB stating "MBA - Master of Business Administration + Master in Big Data and Business Intelligence" and "...that has a duration of 1800 hours". The Isabel I certificate is en route, but I suspect it will be the same (72 ects instead of 60 ects ?). When I'll get also the Isabel I diploma, i'll try the ECE/Validential/IEE route - hope the bigger cert the better (but I heard the contrary )
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