..:: Mom's Corner » Online Degree ::.. Sunday, March 14, 2010
HappyStayHomeMom

 Online Degree

Earn your online degree for potential career earning

Traditional daytime universities are not always an option for today's busy professionals who want to earn a higher degree in education. In the Internet Age, online learning makes it possible for you to balance school, work and family responsibilities. You can still work full-time, attend school, and go home as early as normal. That is because online learning lets you schedule your own class time. In general, you can access course material online or study independently at the times and places you choose. You can progress toward your degree as rapidly as you can demonstrate your knowledge. It's a great approach for adults who want to earn their degrees at their own pace. However, read the following before you consider getting an online degree: 

  1. A lot of HR professionals or hiring managers believe that an online degree earned at an accredited institution (Duke, Stanford) is more credible than one earned at an Internet only institution (Jones International). So you still need to somehow pass the very first step: Admission.
  2. The disadvantage of an online degree earned at an Internet-only institution is the question of just that. Who are they? What do their programs and standards consist of and at what level? Without this public knowledge, it may be a long time before they can gain credibility. Individuals may have to go to extra lengths to be able to assure and prove to an employer that their study and/or degree from an Internet-only program merits the same weight of an accredited University.
  3. Online Degree programs are only ideal for individuals who are :
  • self-directed, independent learners
  • comfortable with having their progress measured through tests and assignments
  • able to commit at least 15 hours per week to their studies

 

Why is Online Learning so Popular (and is it for me)?

Why Keep Learning? There’s no doubting that adult education is a huge industry nowadays. With the job market growing ever more competitive, and employees being expected to continually develop themselves professionally (whatever their profession), ‘lifelong learning’ has become a necessity, rather than just an added bonus. Failure to upskill can be the difference between getting the job of your dreams, and losing out to a slightly more qualified candidate – or simply being passed up yet again for a promotion...


      

 For more sources

Who Would Hire an Online-Degree Candidate

by Jennifer Mulrean from MSN


We know. You're naturally curious, committed to lifelong learning, and generally ambitious. Those are great reasons to pursue an education. But with the high price of college, it's safe to bet that you're also hoping that degree will pay off in more practical terms--with a first job, a promotion, or a job change,perhaps.

The good news is, it probably will. In simple terms of dollars and cents, a college degree can be worth millions in income over the course of your life. According to the most recent United States Census Bureau survey, people holding bachelor's degrees are expected to earn $2.1 million over the course of their working lifetime--almost $1 million more than the $1.2 million in lifetime earnings for people who hold high school diplomas only.

But before you pile up those riches, you first have to get through the door of the human resources department. As a current or prospective online student, it's important to consider how an online degree will measure up against those earned at traditional brick-and-mortar programs.

Attitudes in flux
When asked directly, well-known Fortune 500 companies such as Intel and Wal-Mart said they'd accept online degrees, provided they come from regionally accredited programs.

The last time the question seems to have been put to human resources departments on a broad scale, however, was in late 2000, when Vault, a job-search service and publisher, surveyed almost 300 hiring managers. At the time, 77 percent of respondents said online degrees earned from well-known schools--the Stanford Universities of the world--were more valuable than those from online-only institutions.

A lot has changed since then, including the number of people enrolled in online courses. A 2004 Sloan Consortium report estimated that more than 2.6 million people logged on to at least one online class in the fall of 2004.

Support from employers
If you're attending a school that offers both campus-based and online courses, chances are your diploma won't distinguish whether you logged on or sat in a traditional classroom to earn it. At Columbia University, for example, online students can earn various graduate engineering degrees through Columbia Video Network (CVN). There's no need to distinguish the degrees as having been earned online because they're identical to the courses delivered at the physical campus.

"The degree (CVN students) earn is identical to what the offline students are getting," says Evan Jacobs, marketing manager for CVN. "The modality is secondary; the content is what's important and it's exactly the same."

Many of the CVN students are adults with full-time jobs, and as such, Jacobs estimates that 80 to 90 percent have their tuition reimbursed by their employer. The University of Phoenix estimates that a similar percentage of its own student body also has their tuition reimbursed by their employer.
 
"They have the full support of their companies," Jacobs says. "The fact that the employers are reimbursing them for their tuition is really a validation of our program and of distance learning."

"We've heard from a lot of students that they didn't feel they'd have been able to get that promotion or that next job without the skills and knowledge we provide," he says. And as the number of online students increases, attitudes toward online degrees should continue to open up even further.

The bottom line
Randy Miller, CEO and founder of ReadyMinds, which offers distance career counseling to everyone from students in college to adult learners, says that just in the last two years, human resources departments have become more comfortable with online degrees.

"They're realizing a lot of quality applicants are going the nontraditional route--if you can still call it that--and they don't want to miss out on this quality applicant pool," he says.

Of course there will always be people--recruiters included--who are have reservations about new kinds of learning. But for some perspective, consider a survey by the Distance Education and Training Council (DETC) that found that almost 70 percent of corporate supervisors rated the value of a distance degree as "just as valuable" or "more valuable" than resident-school degrees in the same field. The survey pool, however, was comprised of managers with at least one employee who had earned a degree through a DETC-accredited distance program, suggesting that familiarity breeds acceptance for quality programs.

In the end, Miller says, job seekers of all types have many of the same challenges. "It really comes down to the individual--they still have to distinguish themselves," he says.


      

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