Indiana Rose Lee
Baby Factory Extraordinaire! ;)
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2009
- Messages
- 2,329
Just because something is difficult does not mean it is effective. You can do twice the work and still get half the education.
I think these generalizations about online universities hurt those hard working people who work full time and need a flexible way to learn. I received my Master's online but I did have a local practicum and that landed me a job. Granted, I have received a Bachelor's from a traditional school and had a 10 year career, but it was how I presented myself and took responsibility of my education that made a difference. If someone never stepped foot into a classroom and were branching into a brand new career, I would recommend arranging an internship to make local contacts and learn on the job for a while.
Those who have never taken an online class can't possibly appreciate the effort it takes to learn independently, multitask and complete group projects with people all over the world in different time zones. The experiences made me a better communicator and the professors were wonderful experts who would not choose to teach at a traditional school as they hold prestigious positions in their field during the day.
OP: I would suggest that you research many online programs and schools carefully. I chose a reputable school and was never questioned about the quality of education I received.
I work at a college - I transfer in the credits people have taken at other schools.
I cannot stress enough - please be sure the school is ACCREDITED! We will only accept credit from schools that are regionally accredited - not privately. So if you are looking to transfer those credits to another program on school one day you must check this out. We have students mad with us all the time over this... but it's not our fault. I have students tell me all the time that such-and-such school told me that you would definitely take my credits. Uh, no... many of them will tell you what you want to hear to get your money.
Now, some online schools such as University of Phoenix are regionally accredited. But you need to do your research and ask a lot of questions. Schools such as Bryman, Everest, Eton (whatever name they are using) are only privately accredited. So some of them are absolutely legitimate, reginally accredited schools, you just need to be careful as to which one.
Many brick-and-mortar schools now offer many, many online classes. I would look at one of those schools before I'd go looking for a strictly online school.
Just my 2 cents - I also read an article from NY times recently about some of these schools practices as to lending money and job promises. Not good.
Best of luck to you in your decision.
[Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Governors_University#Accreditation]Western Governors University is regionally accredited by the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities, one of the major accrediting commissions recognized by the U.S. Department of Education, and by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.
I work at a college - I transfer in the credits people have taken at other schools.
I cannot stress enough - please be sure the school is ACCREDITED! We will only accept credit from schools that are regionally accredited - not privately. So if you are looking to transfer those credits to another program on school one day you must check this out. We have students mad with us all the time over this... but it's not our fault. I have students tell me all the time that such-and-such school told me that you would definitely take my credits. Uh, no... many of them will tell you what you want to hear to get your money.
Now, some online schools such as University of Phoenix are regionally accredited. But you need to do your research and ask a lot of questions. Schools such as Bryman, Everest, Eton (whatever name they are using) are only privately accredited. So some of them are absolutely legitimate, reginally accredited schools, you just need to be careful as to which one.
Many brick-and-mortar schools now offer many, many online classes. I would look at one of those schools before I'd go looking for a strictly online school.
Just my 2 cents - I also read an article from NY times recently about some of these schools practices as to lending money and job promises. Not good.
Best of luck to you in your decision.
being I am a full time student, I cannot understand how people even do all there schooling on~line! Some days I am in school for 10 hours!! But then again I am all science!to me, it just would not be school!!
being I am a full time student, I cannot understand how people even do all there schooling on~line! Some days I am in school for 10 hours!! But then again I am all science!to me, it just would not be school!!
being I am a full time student, I cannot understand how people even do all there schooling on~line! Some days I am in school for 10 hours!! But then again I am all science!to me, it just would not be school!!
I am hoping to earn a teaching degree, starting in June and will be attending an entirely online school (WGU). I contacted the state department of ed. and asked about getting my license with this degree. They said as long as the school is regionally accredited. WGU is both regionally and nationally accredited.
How will you do your methods courses online? At some point, won't you need to actually TEACH children face-to-face and have someone mentor you?
Yep, we are having this problem more and more in our office. We have several that can't even get a transcript from these colleges ( and even though we do not accept their credits, we do require a transcript brought in) because the colleges say they owe money. It seems like that happens a huge amount of the time. Not sure if it is students not understanding the charges or the colleges charging huge fees for dropping out/transferring or what the problem is but 9 out of 10 will owe a large amount of money.
As for transfering credits, it still is really going to depend on your intentions. We, as a community college, have classes that do not transfer to a university, but if your intentions are to enter our college and become a Physical Therapist Assistant then the PTA classes not transfering is a non issue. So if you are attending an online school, know that you will be able to advance in the job you have or to get the job you are wanting with the degree from the online school and do not want to advance your education further or will not need to get any credits from another school, transferring credits may be a non issue for you. You need to do a LOT of research and find out if the degree from the college you will attend will work for what you want to do with it.