Price for the money in my opinion is UMPI. You will get a degree that price-wise is the more near your line. If you go to UMPI and want to use the degree in Europe I will not go for a liberal arts degree. In the US they are pretty common and less known in Europe. You can find that people do not understand it well, specially if the concentration is not printed in the diploma itself.
About "convalidaciones" (SPA), "annerkenung" (DE) and others ways of saying recognition of the degree in Europe you will find that you have to make the process in each European country. Each European country works different and needs different time to have the official recognition. Germany will need 3 month and will give you a paper saying what the degree is about and what you can do with it in broad terms. Spain (where you are now) will in theory 3 month, but reality 1 to 2 years(as far as I know), to get the paper that make the recognition of a university title at the level of "Grado". Probably they will have problems to place it, since the system is to compare it with the studies offered in a Spanish university. If you want an accreditation as an informatics degree they will pick up an "Ingenieria informatica" and will find that you degree does not match. If you want to compare it to a business degree with a specialty in IT is more easy to get a match. Anyway the level of having a Bachelor they should give it to you, but maybe the comparison is very wide like a full field of studies. It should open the doors to a master if that is what you are looking later on. Each European country has their own rules and regulations. That you have recognition in a country does not mean that the one besides recognize it in the same exact way. The only way to get full automatic recognition is to make the studies in a European country (bologna Process). It is a mess if you move a lot. The good part is that private employers should accept the degree without problem in most countries and only need to get an official recognition in public workplaces or academic settings in my experience.
About "convalidaciones" (SPA), "annerkenung" (DE) and others ways of saying recognition of the degree in Europe you will find that you have to make the process in each European country. Each European country works different and needs different time to have the official recognition. Germany will need 3 month and will give you a paper saying what the degree is about and what you can do with it in broad terms. Spain (where you are now) will in theory 3 month, but reality 1 to 2 years(as far as I know), to get the paper that make the recognition of a university title at the level of "Grado". Probably they will have problems to place it, since the system is to compare it with the studies offered in a Spanish university. If you want an accreditation as an informatics degree they will pick up an "Ingenieria informatica" and will find that you degree does not match. If you want to compare it to a business degree with a specialty in IT is more easy to get a match. Anyway the level of having a Bachelor they should give it to you, but maybe the comparison is very wide like a full field of studies. It should open the doors to a master if that is what you are looking later on. Each European country has their own rules and regulations. That you have recognition in a country does not mean that the one besides recognize it in the same exact way. The only way to get full automatic recognition is to make the studies in a European country (bologna Process). It is a mess if you move a lot. The good part is that private employers should accept the degree without problem in most countries and only need to get an official recognition in public workplaces or academic settings in my experience.


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