Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Advantages Of Earning Your Degree Online

Online at the Back of the Line
If earning your degree, especially as a mid-life returning student, is about personal fulfillment or training to start your entrepreneurship, then where or how you get your degree isn’t important to you. What’s important is simply that you learn what you need to learn.
If, however, you’re looking for a degree to start or advance your career and you’ll need to impress an employer or potential employer with that degree, you may be somewhat at a disadvantage having earned it online.
It doesn’t seem fair, and in the next few decades this will undoubtedly change as online degrees become more common. But for now there is some resistance on the part of employers to the idea that you have learned as much as you might have in the classroom. The most notable exceptions to this are in the areas where the job skills you’ll tackle once you get your degree rely on your technical and Internet savvy: high tech, new media, and telecommunications. Many employers also value an online consultant-related degree as highly as one earned on campus.
Employers’ concerns about online degrees are that the student is losing out on valuable career-related input because of failure to interact face to face with instructor and peers. They also say it’s just such a new concept that the jury has to be out on whether students are really learning this way

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