I’m probably overthinking this, but this is my scenario:
I started a bachelor’s in law (in my country, Brazil, it’s a 5 year bachelor) and after 2 years, I decided to start another bachelor in Computer Science.
I was getting really involved in studies and research in digital law and cybersecurity, and some opportunities specifically asked to be a degree student in technology or engineering.
The thing is, since I was already studying at a public federal university, which are considered the best in the country with private ones already having a bad-ish reputation, I wasn’t allowed to pursue a second degree also at another public university as I couldn’t take up two public spots.
In my city, no other university offered a computer science bachelor, so distance learning was my option.
I enrolled at a university that has been accredited since the 1970s, but that had a reputation of being easy to get in and easy to graduate.
In Brazil, only a few private universities are not for-profit, and none of them offered a distance learning bachelor specifically in CS, only 2 year courses which weren’t a fit for my needs.
So I graduated from a top school in Law, and a year later from a crappy for-profit one in CS.
The rest of my application would be just fine, I think. Despite pursuing two degrees I still did internships, participated in project, did research, got a great GMAT score.
But I worry that they will see the for-profit university I attended and completely disregard my application without checking it further.
Posted from my mobile device