Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:What a laugh riot this all is, highlighting striver frauds who buy these fake Ivy degrees.
The grifter obsessed with smearing the Harvard president is a Georgetown alum living in Washington state who relatively recently bought an online master’s degree from Harvard’s open-admit extension school. But he deceptively and compulsively called himself a Harvard alum, failing to disclose his precise degree and that it was from the largely online extension school with essentially no admissions standards.
He even used the phrase “night school” to imply he was dashing through the snow in Cambridge after work, when in fact it was an online program he did from home in Washington state. lol. Obviously all an attempt to confer unearned status and smarts.
If you live in Washington state, why wouldn’t you do a program at UW? Because he wanted to buy a phony Harvard degree, right? I assume anyone with one of these bonus Ivy degrees is trying to defraud people.
The irony is you probably believed that virtual school during the pandemic was real school and everyone complaining was just a horrible stupid parent.
Do you think that students have to be physically present in a classroom to get an education?
In many ways yes for sundry reasons. In the first phase of the pandemic, our nation's school system (from K-12 through higher ed whether publics or privates) did the best they could in the circumstances. But nearly all people acknowledge that remote learning is not as effective as cultivating social skills and fostering connections as a student may benefit from when in an in-person learning mode.
That said, not noting that your graduate degree was conferred by an Ivy's extension school, not the university, is disingenuous and dishonest.