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Rust wrote:I have to say, nobody gives a rats ass about degrees at this point in my career, other than to note I have them.
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Martrae wrote:You don't get it. If it's not a place I would trust to send money to then it's JUNK in my eyes. The ONLY redeeming factor about JIU is that you can get federal financial assistance.
Who would go to a place called Jones International University anyway?
Mindia wrote:Martrae wrote:You don't get it. If it's not a place I would trust to send money to then it's JUNK in my eyes. The ONLY redeeming factor about JIU is that you can get federal financial assistance.
Who would go to a place called Jones International University anyway?
Well, for starters I am seriously thinking about going there. The only thing possibly holding me back is that it's a 2-year program. One of our upper-level supervisors at Blue Shield who makes 250k/yr. recommended JIU to me. That speaks volumes in and of itself. However, I'd like to find a 12-month or 18-month accelerated program. Judging a learning institution by its name is like judging a book by its cover... very shallow. Carnegie-Mellon is a stupid sounding name, yet it's one of the top-rated universities in America. JIU is an excellent school, and at this point I am forced to believe that you are just screwing with my head... which is fine.
Rust wrote:I have to say, nobody gives a rats ass about my Engineering *or* my Medical Biophysics degree at this point in my career, other than to note I have them.
If the M.A. gets Mindia a better job/more cash/hawt sex/whatever, go for it. I will agree that some distance learning schools might have more prestige than others, I always used to joke about the University of Phoenix back when they first sent me mail. Just like various schools' MBA programs are more prestigious than others.
As for me, I am probably going to eventually do a Ph.D. at some point when I'm older and want to wind my career down and go back to school, probably in history and/or philosophy.
--R.
Themosticles wrote:Interesting and totally valid points. I do believe in years to come, as more exposure is given to online learning, that it will grow both in size and in recognition. JIU has one very important thing associated with its name and that is the fact that it is the first, numero uno, leading edge, school to be 100% online yet totally accredited.
I used to laugh when UoP recruiters came to our highschool but the more you research it the more you see that the target demographics of these online schools are not recent high school grads or recent college drop outs. They are marketed for working adults, with too much stuff going on in their lives to devot extensive time in a traditional setting. (UoP actually requires, as one of the admission reqs, for certain programs, that you have a job and keep it during your schooling so you can apply your work to school and your school work to work)
Yes, you will see schools try and fail but eventually this type of learning/teaching will improve across the board. This stuff is really new on a scale like this and companies are refining all the operational hazzards, bad PR, and an uncertain/unconvinced public. People are unsure of what they're getting but the demand is out there and as more people enroll and are satisfied with the experience the idea will spread.
I know that our online school has close too or even more students than the entire combined populations of all our on-ground campuses and its been in operation for 1/5th the time. That's a big market to just ignore becuase some people aren't convinced its worthwhile.
Mindia wrote:http://graduation.jonesinternational.edu/2005graduation/home.html
Doesn't sound like one single student was dissatisfied...
Tikker wrote:Mindia wrote:http://graduation.jonesinternational.edu/2005graduation/home.html
Doesn't sound like one single student was dissatisfied...
to be fair, I would have a hard time believing the university website would post unflattering opinions
Mindia wrote:Tikker wrote:Mindia wrote:http://graduation.jonesinternational.edu/2005graduation/home.html
Doesn't sound like one single student was dissatisfied...
to be fair, I would have a hard time believing the university website would post unflattering opinions
It's the graduating ROSTER, retard. They didn't pick and choose who they were going to put up on their website. Ever heard of the word Alumni? You might want to look that one up too.
Mindia wrote:Tikker wrote:Mindia wrote:http://graduation.jonesinternational.edu/2005graduation/home.html
Doesn't sound like one single student was dissatisfied...
to be fair, I would have a hard time believing the university website would post unflattering opinions
It's the graduating ROSTER, retard. They didn't pick and choose who they were going to put up on their website. Ever heard of the word Alumni? You might want to look that one up too.
Tikker wrote:Mindia wrote:Tikker wrote:Mindia wrote:http://graduation.jonesinternational.edu/2005graduation/home.html
Doesn't sound like one single student was dissatisfied...
to be fair, I would have a hard time believing the university website would post unflattering opinions
It's the graduating ROSTER, retard. They didn't pick and choose who they were going to put up on their website. Ever heard of the word Alumni? You might want to look that one up too.
and where does that counter anything I said you stupid fuck?
to be fair, I would have a hard time believing the university website would post unflattering opinions
Mindia wrote:A Master's degree program is not a "walk in the park," although somebody like Rust would probably boast that it is. A lot of people will wash out of a program like that because they either lack the discipline to study, or they lack the time management skills to be successful in a program like this. Anyway, who cares about the 35% washed-out losers? I don't.
Rust wrote:Mindia wrote:A Master's degree program is not a "walk in the park," although somebody like Rust would probably boast that it is. A lot of people will wash out of a program like that because they either lack the discipline to study, or they lack the time management skills to be successful in a program like this. Anyway, who cares about the 35% washed-out losers? I don't.
Compared to a Ph.D., an M.Sc. *is* a walk in the park. The ting about grad school is getting admitted. Once you're in it's not that hard, at least at the Master's level.
--R.
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