jpgbexplorer85
Military
- Nov 21, 2018
- 9
Hello everyone:
I am thinking of returning to school at some point to take mechanical engineering. In the meantime, I figured it would be wise to get good at AutoCAD. Now there are two ways I can do this.
Option A: Spend about $4200 on an AutoCAD program at a community college and get a certificate at the end ( I took the pre-entry course during the summer to dip my toes in. I ended up enjoying it. I believe we used the newest 2018 edition. I suppose getting a certificate at the end would help when I am trying to find a job.
Option B: Buy the AutoCAD 2015 Bible ( and an older version of AutoCAD off Amazon. Then teach myself. This would be a less expensive alternative.
So, my questions are
1) Is it worth paying this kind of money for an AutoCAD course? Would I be better off learning it on my own if I intend to return for mechanical engineering anyway?
2) If I go the Option B route, which versions of AutoCAD should I be shopping around for on Amazon/EBay?
Thanks!
James
I am thinking of returning to school at some point to take mechanical engineering. In the meantime, I figured it would be wise to get good at AutoCAD. Now there are two ways I can do this.
Option A: Spend about $4200 on an AutoCAD program at a community college and get a certificate at the end ( I took the pre-entry course during the summer to dip my toes in. I ended up enjoying it. I believe we used the newest 2018 edition. I suppose getting a certificate at the end would help when I am trying to find a job.
Option B: Buy the AutoCAD 2015 Bible ( and an older version of AutoCAD off Amazon. Then teach myself. This would be a less expensive alternative.
So, my questions are
1) Is it worth paying this kind of money for an AutoCAD course? Would I be better off learning it on my own if I intend to return for mechanical engineering anyway?
2) If I go the Option B route, which versions of AutoCAD should I be shopping around for on Amazon/EBay?
Thanks!
James