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Anyone every hear of the following;
Accreditation Panel for Online Colleges & Universities (APTEC).
I have looked on-line and have not come up with much. I have a few e-mails out to check the validity of it.
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pcs Wrote:Anyone every hear of the following;
Accreditation Panel for Online Colleges & Universities (APTEC).
I have looked on-line and have not come up with much. I have a few e-mails out to check the validity of it.
That's a bad sign. If you can't quickly and conclusively determine the validity, then a prospective school or employer isn't likely going to be able to either.
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With so many regionally-accredited institutions offering online degrees, including flexible/inexpensive options like the Big 3, why would you even consider any program whose only accreditation is some mysterious organization no one has ever heard of?
Loved the photo on the main page of the APTEC website. Not the most flattering expressions on those guys...:p
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From the APTEC.org website:
"Accreditation by The Online Panel for Online Colleges and Universities (APTEC) means that a post secondary institution's own goals are soundly conceived its educational programs have been intelligently devised its purposes are being accomplished and it is organized, staffed, and well-supported."
Get a degree from one of these schools, and you, too, can learn to write in run-on sentences!
Regional accreditation is still the gold standard for schools in the United States.
For some purposes, other forms of accreditation would suffice. For schools in the United States, regional accreditation is recommended. At the very least, though, the school should be accredited by an accreditation organization recognized by the Council on Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA). A school that is not accredited by a CHEA accreditation organization is generally not going to be recognized elsewhere.
You can view the list of CHEA-recognized accreditation agencies here:
http://www.chea.org/pdf/2009_2010_Direct...ations.pdf
And no, APTEC is not included. Keep in mind that a lot of "accreditation mills" are popping up now, so that schools that are "degree mills" can claim to be accredited. These so-called accreditation agencies could very likely be owned and operated by some of the same people that run the degree mill schools. Just because a school claims to be accredited, doesn't mean that the degree is valid.
For schools outside the United States, accreditation is usually governed by the Ministry of Education of the respective country and/or province.
To demonstrate the importance of valid accreditation, let me give you an example. There is a Christian college in my town which is not accredited... not regionally accredited, not nationally accredited, not accredited by any CHEA-recognized faith-based accreditation agency. Nevertheless, this institution awards its own degrees. Graduates from this school have a difficult time finding employment outside the college's alumni network. This school awards education degrees all the way up to the doctoral level. However, the students who earn these degrees do not qualify for teacher certification since their degrees are not accredited.
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scam, scam, scam.
Mill school.
I might get my degree that i need to get out of my job though hilarious
No but for real scam
[SIZE="3"][SIZE="2"][SIZE="1"][SIZE="1"][SIZE="4"][SIZE="4"][FONT="Arial Narrow"]"Oh, get a job? Just get a job? Why don't I strap on my job helmet, and squeeze down into a job cannon and fire off into job land, where jobs grow on jobbies!" Its always sunny in Philadelphia.
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FEMA IS courses- alot
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attempting currently
Masters in counseling
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09-04-2009, 08:22 AM
(This post was last modified: 09-04-2009, 08:24 AM by jacanyardie.)
MaieJaie Wrote:From the APTEC.org website:
"Accreditation by The Online Panel for Online Colleges and Universities (APTEC) means that a post secondary institution's own goals are soundly conceived its educational programs have been intelligently devised its purposes are being accomplished and it is organized, staffed, and well-supported."
Get a degree from one of these schools, and you, too, can learn to write in run-on sentences!
Regional accreditation is still the gold standard for schools in the United States.
For some purposes, other forms of accreditation would suffice. For schools in the United States, regional accreditation is recommended. At the very least, though, the school should be accredited by an accreditation organization recognized by the Council on Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA). A school that is not accredited by a CHEA accreditation organization is generally not going to be recognized elsewhere.
You can view the list of CHEA-recognized accreditation agencies here:
http://www.chea.org/pdf/2009_2010_Direct...ations.pdf
And no, APTEC is not included. Keep in mind that a lot of "accreditation mills" are popping up now, so that schools that are "degree mills" can claim to be accredited. These so-called accreditation agencies could very likely be owned and operated by some of the same people that run the degree mill schools. Just because a school claims to be accredited, doesn't mean that the degree is valid.
For schools outside the United States, accreditation is usually governed by the Ministry of Education of the respective country and/or province.
To demonstrate the importance of valid accreditation, let me give you an example. There is a Christian college in my town which is not accredited... not regionally accredited, not nationally accredited, not accredited by any CHEA-recognized faith-based accreditation agency. Nevertheless, this institution awards its own degrees. Graduates from this school have a difficult time finding employment outside the college's alumni network. This school awards education degrees all the way up to the doctoral level. However, the students who earn these degrees do not qualify for teacher certification since their degrees are not accredited.
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Great info everyone. I did hear back from some contacts I have and yes degree mill!! So pass this one on stay away!!
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It took me about 15 seconds to find out the organization's domain name was first reserved in 2006 and, worse, it's registered anonymously -- not what you expect from a real higher-ed accreditation body.
Aptec.org - Apte c - Accreditation Panel for Online Colleges and Universities (APTEC)
Kelly
BS, History - Excelsior College - 2011
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Hah,
I looked at thier PDF brochure....
Is is obviously from outside the US, English is a second language. there are several glaring usage errors.
Additionally thier "seal" of approval is this
Which I do not see any thing that says APTEC on it, nor am I able to find those organizations online.
And I agree about the photograph "about us"
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I don't know if I should laugh about the guy in the red tie or be afraid, be very afraid. hilarious
________________________
CLEP
Intro to Psychology 53/50
Intro to Management 59/50
Intro to Sociology 62/50
Humanities 54/50
DSST
Intro to Computing 56/45
World Religions 405/400
FEMA
19
Community College 9 sm hours Gen Elective
[SIZE="5"]CREDITS[/SIZE]
[SIZE="5"]49/120[/SIZE]
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