RangerPooh
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2005
- Messages
- 11,947
From RangerPooh's DH:
Hi there,
I am a PhD student as well as staff at a public university in Washington State. I help in the admissions process and look at academic records to evaluate for transfer credit. I also work with employers (from the career center on campus) to see what it is they are looking for in order to communicate that back to the respective departments. First, with regards to University of Phoenix and other such private online schools....They can claim that they are "accredited" because accredited is a loose term. For instance, they are not accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. This is considered the "real" accreditation. They can claim they are accredited because some other entity accredited them. For example, you can take any product and call it "certified" when in reality, the certification means that they hired some guy to stand on the line and put a sticker on it. It is simply a marketing tool. At my university, when we recieve transcripts from UoP, we simply throw them into the file and do not look at them for GPA (tend to be inflated), course content, or credits. UoP is a good option for those that simply have no other choice as it is better than nothing. It is important to note however that that academic world does not recognize degrees from UoP or other schools like it. The corp. world also views it very cautiously. My advice is that you find a public university offering an online degree program and go from there. You will get a MUCH higher quality education, for about the same if not less cost, that is respected wherever you go.
With regards to your old credits/units... some schools will still give you credit for the old units, but in pretty much every case you will be required to meet new catalog requirements. WHat I mean by that is that while they will look at your transcripts course by course (giving you credit 1:1 for a math course or a history) any progress you made toward what used to be graduation requirements will no longer count. You will now be required to meet the requirements that new incomming freshman must meet. But it is well worth it!
Good luck!
Hi there,
I am a PhD student as well as staff at a public university in Washington State. I help in the admissions process and look at academic records to evaluate for transfer credit. I also work with employers (from the career center on campus) to see what it is they are looking for in order to communicate that back to the respective departments. First, with regards to University of Phoenix and other such private online schools....They can claim that they are "accredited" because accredited is a loose term. For instance, they are not accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. This is considered the "real" accreditation. They can claim they are accredited because some other entity accredited them. For example, you can take any product and call it "certified" when in reality, the certification means that they hired some guy to stand on the line and put a sticker on it. It is simply a marketing tool. At my university, when we recieve transcripts from UoP, we simply throw them into the file and do not look at them for GPA (tend to be inflated), course content, or credits. UoP is a good option for those that simply have no other choice as it is better than nothing. It is important to note however that that academic world does not recognize degrees from UoP or other schools like it. The corp. world also views it very cautiously. My advice is that you find a public university offering an online degree program and go from there. You will get a MUCH higher quality education, for about the same if not less cost, that is respected wherever you go.
With regards to your old credits/units... some schools will still give you credit for the old units, but in pretty much every case you will be required to meet new catalog requirements. WHat I mean by that is that while they will look at your transcripts course by course (giving you credit 1:1 for a math course or a history) any progress you made toward what used to be graduation requirements will no longer count. You will now be required to meet the requirements that new incomming freshman must meet. But it is well worth it!
Good luck!