- Joined
- Jul 28, 2008
- Messages
- 6,187
I think the good news is that negative attitudes towards online degrees may eventually change as the younger crowd gets into the workforce. I know a few students attending brick & mortar schools that take online classes and they say they are harder than their in-classroom ones.
Some people have this idea that with an online degree you just pay a fee and get the degree. They have no clue how much work it actually is.
I go to a brick and mortar school most of the time but I chose to take two of my writing, one math and a food & nutrition classes online through the school's online system.
The writing classes were a breeze but I think they're the exception since a lot of writing is self-taught. As in, you're given the information and you need to make something of it. This was WR 121 and WR 122.
However, the math was very difficult. And this is coming from someone who is very good at math. But, this also had something to do with the instructor. Food & nutrition also wasn't easy. In both classes, I felt like I had to sift through a lot of useless information to get what I needed while in class, I could have just asked the professor. Also, something that would have just been told to you in one sentence, if in person, had to be found on my own.
After that I vowed to never take another online class unless it was writing. But the rest of my classes are in Biology or French, and I can't take those online anyway.