02-28-2022, 08:33 PM
(02-25-2022, 09:31 PM)Tedium Wrote: It’s a Connecticut school primarily for Connecticut residents. The majority of their students are in-state. They only have to offer degrees that their state needs and/or what the residents need.
It may not work for the members of this forum, but it must be working for Connecticut, or they would not still be funding them.
That is definitely the case. When I was enrolled, I was both surprised that not only was almost everyone in my cohorts from Connecticut, most of them had either done almost their entire degree program at Charter Oak or transferred in from a community college. I was surprised nobody but me seemed to be doing the alt credit route.