Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Damn, now it has to be a school that is "good enough" too? I guess I'm not as qualified as I thought I was.
+1
I respect anyone that goes to college, whether it is 'respectable' or not.
I guess what I meant was, she didn't have to attend Harvard but if her degree is from University of Phoenix online "campus" it doesn't really mean anything to me.
So the online courses I am taking to finish my bachelor's degree in early childhood education while working 50 hours/wk wouldn't mean anything to you? I chose to take my courses online because of the flexibility they offered. I could easily have chosen to take the courses on campus, but that would have meant that after a 10.25 hr workday I would need to drive into the city to attend class for 3 1/2 hours before finally getting home around 10:45pm (after leaving my house at 6:20am).
My online courses require the same fieldwork component as on-campus classes. I still have to spend a minimum of 5-10 hours (over 6-8 weeks) in classrooms observing and teaching lessons. The program requirements mean I need to complete a 20 week internship beginning this summer. I have 4.0 GPA. None of this would matter to you because of the format I chose? Good to know that some people feel the work I am doing means nothing b/c I found a program that offered the flexibility I needed.
Not the PP, but it sounds like you are taking online courses through a standard university (not a University of Phoenix type campus). Having taken online courses through my own university and compared them to family members who took University of Phoenix classes, I can say there's a pretty big difference in difficulty and expectations. I think to most people, whether the coursework was online or not will not matter, (does that even show up on your degree?) but the name of the school will- which is true of most professions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Damn, now it has to be a school that is "good enough" too? I guess I'm not as qualified as I thought I was.
+1
I respect anyone that goes to college, whether it is 'respectable' or not.
I guess what I meant was, she didn't have to attend Harvard but if her degree is from University of Phoenix online "campus" it doesn't really mean anything to me.
So the online courses I am taking to finish my bachelor's degree in early childhood education while working 50 hours/wk wouldn't mean anything to you? I chose to take my courses online because of the flexibility they offered. I could easily have chosen to take the courses on campus, but that would have meant that after a 10.25 hr workday I would need to drive into the city to attend class for 3 1/2 hours before finally getting home around 10:45pm (after leaving my house at 6:20am).
My online courses require the same fieldwork component as on-campus classes. I still have to spend a minimum of 5-10 hours (over 6-8 weeks) in classrooms observing and teaching lessons. The program requirements mean I need to complete a 20 week internship beginning this summer. I have 4.0 GPA. None of this would matter to you because of the format I chose? Good to know that some people feel the work I am doing means nothing b/c I found a program that offered the flexibility I needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Damn, now it has to be a school that is "good enough" too? I guess I'm not as qualified as I thought I was.
+1
I respect anyone that goes to college, whether it is 'respectable' or not.
I guess what I meant was, she didn't have to attend Harvard but if her degree is from University of Phoenix online "campus" it doesn't really mean anything to me.
Anonymous wrote:I don't care what the degree is in, but I am interested in where they attended school and what their GPA was. To me, a good degree from a respectable school (with a good GPA) suggests dedication, perseverance, critical thinking, the ability to work in a team and to advocate and negotiate (with classmates and professors), and so on. Whether they studied ECE or economics is irrelevant to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Damn, now it has to be a school that is "good enough" too? I guess I'm not as qualified as I thought I was.
+1
I respect anyone that goes to college, whether it is 'respectable' or not.
Anonymous wrote:MB here - a college degree matters much less to me in a nanny than relevant work experience. I care more about safety, health, fun, and nurturing than I do about education and it doesn't take a college degree to be an expert in the things that I prioritize.
It's great if you have one - sure, it's just not a particularly important issue for me.
That said, I do want a nanny that speaks well, has good manners, common sense, etc... and will model those things for my kids. But again - a college degree doesn't guarantee that.
Anonymous wrote:Damn, now it has to be a school that is "good enough" too? I guess I'm not as qualified as I thought I was.