If they're subsidizing the costs that much, then the costs really haven't gone up much despite so much waste. So that's cool.
It depends on the position. I would be very reluctant to hire someone in an engineering, finance, economics capacity with a U of Phoenix degree. There are time management skills, team projects, and long-term assignments that are critical to learn which can only be done in an on-campus program. I have no problem with an online MBA because they are bullshit anyway...simply teaching risk avoidance. That is fine for IBM or Cisco but for most businesses it is pretty useless. I do hire people into admin, HR, and junior marketing roles with online degrees but have to admit that I shook my head when i saw they now give college credit for work experience.
I recently read the end of average by a harvard professor talking about individualized learning and how we should employ more online learning to allow people to learn at their own pace. While i agree people learn different subjects at different paces the fact is that in the real world there ARE deadlines, project due dates, and deliverables that can't just be completed when someone feels competent enough to complete the task. so i'm on the fence with the whole "individual learning" deal...
It's really not that cool because it isn't true. Costs have skyrocketed. There is a reason there is 1.2T in student loan debt out there.
no offense but anyone who says "education is a scam" is most likely just a lazy individual frustrated at their own shortcomings. for 99% of people, you're not going anywhere significant if you don't have your college degree (unless you run your own successful business, in which case I salute you)
Which brings us right back to my original points: Harvard, Yale, West Point, community college, financial aid, scholarships, loan forgiveness, et cetera, can prevent you from accruing or holding on to any student debt. Lots of students get scammed by not going those routes, that doesn't make education a scam.
How many people in the US enter college a year? That pathway obviously isn't feasible for everyone and to think it is would be horrible and atrocious policy.
Every single one of them starting at a four year school could instead start at a two year school and have their cost almost cut in half. Just because some people pay $4500 for a 100 level class doesn't mean everyone has to. Public two year school won't charge more than $300
Think of it this way, when someone says it is a "scam", they really just mean that it is a woefully mismanaged industry and they're just not really articulating that point as well as they probably can.
Obviously when harnessed correctly it has a ton of value for the individual and society.
my friends ask me all the time what they should be telling their kids. I give the same answer every time ... go the CC route to slog through your core curriculum, making sure the credits transfer of course, then go to a college away from home that has an extremely strong program in their chosen field. No sense in racking up 50k/yr debt for core curriculum at an average institution when you can get this done for pennies on the dollar at a local CC.Which brings us right back to my original points: Harvard, Yale, West Point, community college, financial aid, scholarships, loan forgiveness, et cetera, can prevent you from accruing or holding on to any student debt. Lots of students get scammed by not going those routes, that doesn't make education a scam.
Every single one of them starting at a four year school could instead start at a two year school and have their cost almost cut in half. Just because some people pay $4500 for a 100 level class doesn't mean everyone has to. Public two year school won't charge more than $300
my friends ask me all the time what they should be telling their kids. I give the same answer every time ... go the CC route to slog through your core curriculum, making sure the credits transfer of course, then go to a college away from home that has an extremely strong program in their chosen field. No sense in racking up 50k/yr debt for core curriculum at an average institution when you can get this done for pennies on the dollar at a local CC.
education is absolutely not a scam no matter how many millionaires did it without a degree. unless your kid has exceptional motivation and a truly entrepreneurial attitude he/she cannot expect to follow that path.
If they're subsidizing the costs that much, then the costs really haven't gone up much despite so much waste. So that's cool.