And you, my dear, are an idiot. I bet you have a GED.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And you know this how? Tell us about your practical experience, not what you've read in the funny papers.Anonymous wrote:This thread is sad. The purpose of education should be to master the subject- not to get a job. But perhaps you enjoy the system as it is- paying through the nose for little value.
Are you really asking this question in 2013?
Wow, you are dumb. I bet you have at least 2 degrees.
This may apply to someone who is just getting out of school but many online advance degree candidates are already established and working towards advancement in their own companies so to speak. And it is about the degree. Interaction with movers and shakers is worthless without it.Anonymous wrote:You don't get the present and future contacts and friends who help you get jobs and opportunities. It's about the interaction with people, not the degree.
Anonymous wrote:And you know this how? Tell us about your practical experience, not what you've read in the funny papers.Anonymous wrote:This thread is sad. The purpose of education should be to master the subject- not to get a job. But perhaps you enjoy the system as it is- paying through the nose for little value.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think online classes are getting harder. My husband is getting his second masters online. He has so much reading, every other day he has post comments then comment on 2 other people's comments and do weekly assignments. It is way more time commitment than a brick and mortar school class.
I agree with you. I teach online for UMUC. The work load is much harder than a traditional classroom setting. Most of the learning falls to the student. There is no face to face opportunity where a student can say...I just don't understand and I'm so lost that I can't even begin to articulate what I don't understand. Many of my students comment that they wish they had taken the class in person. So many people think it's going to be easier and then are disappointed to learn how much work and effort it really is.
And you know this how? Tell us about your practical experience, not what you've read in the funny papers.Anonymous wrote:This thread is sad. The purpose of education should be to master the subject- not to get a job. But perhaps you enjoy the system as it is- paying through the nose for little value.
Anonymous wrote:What about online executive MBAs? Are those worth the money? I found a reputable school with an executive MBA program that is $45K a year but I can get my MBA in 2 years
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a SAHM to 2 young kids so an online program works best for me. I'm about to transfer my
community college credits over to UMUC. I checked and it is a credited school. I'm about to invest a lot of money in going to school there - will it be for nothing?
Lesson 1: Accredited school not credited.
Anonymous wrote:Would it scare you if I said that there are online nursing schools releasing unprepared students into the market right under your noses in DC area?
Anonymous wrote:I'm a SAHM to 2 young kids so an online program works best for me. I'm about to transfer my
community college credits over to UMUC. I checked and it is a credited school. I'm about to invest a lot of money in going to school there - will it be for nothing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I agree with you. I teach online for UMUC. The work load is much harder than a traditional classroom setting. Most of the learning falls to the student. There is no face to face opportunity where a student can say...I just don't understand and I'm so lost that I can't even begin to articulate what I don't understand. Many of my students comment that they wish they had taken the class in person. So many people think it's going to be easier and then are disappointed to learn how much work and effort it really is.
I'm glad you posted, because I have one qualm about a degree that's all online. Would there be any opportunity for networking? For people who are changing careers, making connections is important.