Posts: 20
Threads: 11
Likes Received: 8 in 6 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Apr 2020
UniAthena is partnering with Carolina University to offer an MBA for $4,500. Although Carolina University's TRACS accreditation may be a little inconvenient, it might be useful for admission to Liberty or other regionally-accredited religious schools.
https://uniathena.com/course/2241
Posts: 1,508
Threads: 75
Likes Received: 759 in 463 posts
Likes Given: 1,409
Joined: Apr 2021
This is somewhat interesting. It’s like an Italian version of ENEB… but a little more expensive
•
Posts: 18,370
Threads: 971
Likes Received: 6,077 in 4,579 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Feb 2016
Basically, Athena Education group has a few partners, I think it's a great option to get awarded with "Dual" credentials.
I recall they work with a few institutions from certs and diplomas up to degrees at the graduate level (including the DBA).
•
Posts: 47
Threads: 2
Likes Received: 41 in 24 posts
Likes Given: 2
Joined: Apr 2014
While I am glad that other options are being created, can someone give me a use case where getting a $4,500 MBA from a place like Carolina University, which is nationally accredited is better than getting a $9,900 MBA from some place like Eastern University, which is regionally accredited? I k now that it is not a degree mill, like the unaccredited programs. I am just exploring the utility.
What is the utility of nationally accredited MBA programs like this vs the super cheap regionally accredited programs? I will admit that I am not up to speed on much with national accreditation. I remember reading about it more during the mid-2000's, when schools like Aspen U getting DETC accreditation and offering doctorates sparked a lot of discussion on the sister boards. This was back when there were far fewer options.
MS, Data Science, Eastern University
ALM, Information Technology, Harvard University
AB, Government, Georgetown University
In Progress: MS, Computer Science, Georgia Institute of Technology (Projected Completion 2027)
Posts: 204
Threads: 53
Likes Received: 176 in 97 posts
Likes Given: 61
Joined: Oct 2020
06-04-2022, 07:30 AM
(This post was last modified: 06-04-2022, 07:35 AM by smartdegree.)
(06-03-2022, 11:41 PM)mcjon77 Wrote: While I am glad that other options are being created, can someone give me a use case where getting a $4,500 MBA from a place like Carolina University, which is nationally accredited is better than getting a $9,900 MBA from some place like Eastern University, which is regionally accredited? I k now that it is not a degree mill, like the unaccredited programs. I am just exploring the utility.
What is the utility of nationally accredited MBA programs like this vs the super cheap regionally accredited programs? I will admit that I am not up to speed on much with national accreditation. I remember reading about it more during the mid-2000's, when schools like Aspen U getting DETC accreditation and offering doctorates sparked a lot of discussion on the sister boards. This was back when there were far fewer options.
I used to work for a US state government and having any nationally/regionally accredited masters degree (as a checkbox) works equally well in getting promoted to certain job levels. I think those who would choose the $4,500 nationally accredited option are those who just want the checkbox and are living paycheck to paycheck right now so that an additional 5K might mean the difference between a masters and no masters. For people who are financially flexible, obviously the decision can be made based on far more factors than money.
•
Posts: 8,355
Threads: 91
Likes Received: 3,490 in 2,496 posts
Likes Given: 4,115
Joined: May 2020
One can get an MBA from an RA school - HAU - for $3000. For an MBA I'd definitely want an RA school.
Posts: 47
Threads: 2
Likes Received: 41 in 24 posts
Likes Given: 2
Joined: Apr 2014
(06-04-2022, 07:30 AM)smartdegree Wrote: (06-03-2022, 11:41 PM)mcjon77 Wrote: While I am glad that other options are being created, can someone give me a use case where getting a $4,500 MBA from a place like Carolina University, which is nationally accredited is better than getting a $9,900 MBA from some place like Eastern University, which is regionally accredited? I k now that it is not a degree mill, like the unaccredited programs. I am just exploring the utility.
What is the utility of nationally accredited MBA programs like this vs the super cheap regionally accredited programs? I will admit that I am not up to speed on much with national accreditation. I remember reading about it more during the mid-2000's, when schools like Aspen U getting DETC accreditation and offering doctorates sparked a lot of discussion on the sister boards. This was back when there were far fewer options.
I used to work for a US state government and having any nationally/regionally accredited masters degree (as a checkbox) works equally well in getting promoted to certain job levels. I think those who would choose the $4,500 nationally accredited option are those who just want the checkbox and are living paycheck to paycheck right now so that an additional 5K might mean the difference between a masters and no masters. For people who are financially flexible, obviously the decision can be made based on far more factors than money.
That is a legit reason, especially if you are a career federal employee. Why pay more money, when you just need to check the box to go to the next paygrade? Thanks!
MS, Data Science, Eastern University
ALM, Information Technology, Harvard University
AB, Government, Georgetown University
In Progress: MS, Computer Science, Georgia Institute of Technology (Projected Completion 2027)
Posts: 1,508
Threads: 75
Likes Received: 759 in 463 posts
Likes Given: 1,409
Joined: Apr 2021
(06-03-2022, 11:41 PM)mcjon77 Wrote: While I am glad that other options are being created, can someone give me a use case where getting a $4,500 MBA from a place like Carolina University, which is nationally accredited is better than getting a $9,900 MBA from some place like Eastern University, which is regionally accredited? I k now that it is not a degree mill, like the unaccredited programs. I am just exploring the utility.
What is the utility of nationally accredited MBA programs like this vs the super cheap regionally accredited programs? I will admit that I am not up to speed on much with national accreditation. I remember reading about it more during the mid-2000's, when schools like Aspen U getting DETC accreditation and offering doctorates sparked a lot of discussion on the sister boards. This was back when there were far fewer options.
I think it widely depends on what you want to do with it afterwards.
I have heard for those who want to teach at a university, they often need to be RA.
•
Posts: 8
Threads: 5
Likes Received: 1 in 1 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Aug 2019
(05-31-2022, 09:02 PM)archsvt Wrote: UniAthena is partnering with Carolina University to offer an MBA for $4,500. Although Carolina University's TRACS accreditation may be a little inconvenient, it might be useful for admission to Liberty or other regionally-accredited religious schools.
https://uniathena.com/course/2241
They have doubled the price to $9,000.
Posts: 1,508
Threads: 75
Likes Received: 759 in 463 posts
Likes Given: 1,409
Joined: Apr 2021
•
|