So it's official, I'm getting old. I've been out of college for over 5-6 years now and slowed school to a crawl so I could persue that wonderful green dollar in my career at the time. Shortly after, I joined the AF for something new and different. Ended up not having any time to goto college. So now my enlistment is up and I'm stuck with a whole whooping 15 credits or so.
Anyhow, I no longer have the patience to sit in a classroom for 2 years for a stinking associates degree. That is just too long. Maybe fresh out of high school, but I've got REAL bills now and a 2 year old daughter to raise.
After peeking at some of these "schools" that pop up on daytime tv, I decided to sign up for more information. By tomorrow morning I will have signed my last form. Kinda of silly for me to ask for last second information and assistance but anything helps.
What I'm wondering about is schools like "University of Phoenix". Which that one in particular has the same regional accreditation as Arizona State University:
http://www.collegesource.org/displayinfo/profile.asp?institutionid=24253
http://www.collegesource.org/displayinfo/profile.asp?institutionid=14589
My buddy who teaches at the local Community College also says the regional accreditation is good to go. Well the degree I'm looking at is an online Associates of Arts in Business degree. It should only take me a year or less. The cost is about $17,500 roughly. I also plan to persue my bachelors immediately afterwards. Maybe through them too.
It kind of kills my life goal of Masters degree in Mechanical Engineering but is a degree from this place really worth it? Or am I just going to be laughed at?
there is still a reason why i take them seriously enough to even consider though. I know of several individuals who have a degree from the Community College of the Air Force and a degree from University of Phoenix. They do rather well financially and in their careers. I'm not immediately looking for world riches and fame but rather stability.
What do you think about this place? I know it's NOTHING like many of the places alot of you went to college
http://www.nsxprime.com/forums/showthread.php?t=17319&highlight=university+phoenix
but this is one of my only reasonable options.
Anyhow, I no longer have the patience to sit in a classroom for 2 years for a stinking associates degree. That is just too long. Maybe fresh out of high school, but I've got REAL bills now and a 2 year old daughter to raise.
After peeking at some of these "schools" that pop up on daytime tv, I decided to sign up for more information. By tomorrow morning I will have signed my last form. Kinda of silly for me to ask for last second information and assistance but anything helps.
What I'm wondering about is schools like "University of Phoenix". Which that one in particular has the same regional accreditation as Arizona State University:
http://www.collegesource.org/displayinfo/profile.asp?institutionid=24253
http://www.collegesource.org/displayinfo/profile.asp?institutionid=14589
My buddy who teaches at the local Community College also says the regional accreditation is good to go. Well the degree I'm looking at is an online Associates of Arts in Business degree. It should only take me a year or less. The cost is about $17,500 roughly. I also plan to persue my bachelors immediately afterwards. Maybe through them too.
It kind of kills my life goal of Masters degree in Mechanical Engineering but is a degree from this place really worth it? Or am I just going to be laughed at?
there is still a reason why i take them seriously enough to even consider though. I know of several individuals who have a degree from the Community College of the Air Force and a degree from University of Phoenix. They do rather well financially and in their careers. I'm not immediately looking for world riches and fame but rather stability.
What do you think about this place? I know it's NOTHING like many of the places alot of you went to college
http://www.nsxprime.com/forums/showthread.php?t=17319&highlight=university+phoenix
but this is one of my only reasonable options.