English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I am, and I do. I'm working on a bachelor's degree online, and it's so frustrating when people bad mouth it. They don't seem to take me that seriously. I work just as hard as any other student. I'm afraid that if I get my degree online that it may be hard to get a job, because of some people having negative thoughts about online education. Do you ever wonder if this is possible? I love going online. It works for me and my schedule. I am just so tired of people bad mouthing me for it. If this happens to you, how do you deal with it (besides telling them off in an inappropiate way :) )?

2007-03-05 06:30:47 · 3 answers · asked by jmarie7 1 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

3 answers

I didn't take an offline degree myself yet, but I found a real jerk who trashed online degrees.

I basically questioned the value of his degree, he "told on" me, and I got into trouble. But then, to make it even funnier, he's looking for an online PhD!

Some online degrees are wastes of money. There are a lot of disreputable firms to beware of.

I don't think online degrees help with many jobs. If the institution is not known for offline degrees as well, then it's likely not well thought of.

But what you can do is take the credits from the first half, and move to campus for the last part.

If you can't transfer the credits to an online campus, well, then it was a bad choice, sorry. You don't put it on your cv/resume unless you were doing nothing else at that time.

They shouldn't bad mouth you for it though. You may have been taken for a ride, but you learn from your mistakes. And if you learned something from the classes, well, it's the knowledge you use, not the degree.

2007-03-05 07:08:36 · answer #1 · answered by dude 5 · 0 0

I received my Masters degree through an online program. However, if people ask where I got my Masters, I simply tell them it was Regis Univ. and not explicitly tell them it was online. I took the online version due to time constraints with work and home, but I took the same classes as those in the physical building.

If you are catching flak from it, just tell them the school. People dont need to be privvy to the fact that you did it online as opposed to in a class. Aside from that, the number of online enrollments is skyrocketing. Soon enough, people will completely accept it, and not even give it a second thought.

2007-03-05 06:36:33 · answer #2 · answered by dmc177 4 · 0 0

I particularly have worked for about 30 years contained in the psychological well being field in Texas. Over the technique my occupation, the web ranges have proliferated, so I particularly were skeptical. after I see an internet degree from a "usual" college, i do no longer trouble a lot... like UT or Texas Tech or Texas A&M; yet after I see those ranges from colleges that are literally not mainstream, I start up to ask your self. i'm no longer affirming any college outside Texas is a issue, yet any college it truly is no longer specially on campus may be suspect. The time period "mail order degree" has been round for some time now, so those colleges that look too reliable to be genuine may only be that.

2016-12-05 06:51:31 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers