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Just curious.
For a little while, I was considering Excelsior for their Master's in Liberal Arts degree, but there were just so many more cheaper options out there.
Was just wondering if anybody happened to get a MA or MS from one of the big three - and if so, how was your experience?
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Even if you transfer in the max amount for credit transfer to a Big 3 grad degree, you're over paying. Like you said, lots of cheaper options.
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(05-09-2019, 05:13 PM)kevinmane Wrote: Just curious.
For a little while, I was considering Excelsior for their Master's in Liberal Arts degree, but there were just so many more cheaper options out there.
Was just wondering if anybody happened to get a MA or MS from one of the big three - and if so, how was your experience?
I think the master's in liberal arts is gone. They took it off the website, and it's not in the graduate catalog.
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05-09-2019, 08:05 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-09-2019, 08:07 PM by Jonathan Whatley.)
Graduate tuitions per semester hour are…
Charter Oak 529 (outside CT) 509 (in CT)
Excelsior 645 (all programs)
TESU 668 (or higher for MBA, DBA, or DNP)
So a 33 sh Charter Oak master's is below 20k. Not in the deep bargain basement like Amberton or an aggressively fast max-out of some competency-based degrees, but right around popular consumer choices like CSU Global or Liberty, and below some like SNHU or Brandman. COSC's only master's degree, the MS in Organizational Effectiveness and Leadership (concentration in either Business or Nonprofit), only started courses in Fall 2016 though, so don't expect a large alumni population.
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(05-09-2019, 08:05 PM)Jonathan Whatley Wrote: Graduate tuitions per semester hour are…
Charter Oak 529 (outside CT) 509 (in CT)
Excelsior 645 (all programs)
TESU 668 (or higher for MBA, DBA, or DNP)
So a 33 sh Charter Oak master's is below 20k. Not in the deep bargain basement like Amberton or an aggressively fast max-out of some competency-based degrees, but right around popular consumer choices like CSU Global or Liberty, and below some like SNHU or Brandman. COSC's only master's degree, the MS in Organizational Effectiveness and Leadership (concentration in either Business or Nonprofit), only started courses in Fall 2016 though, so don't expect a large alumni population.
That's way overpriced for a MA degree from a no-name school. There's just no point.
If you're going to spend $20k for a MA/MBA, there are plenty of places where you can do so and get other benefits like networking.
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05-10-2019, 09:29 AM
(This post was last modified: 05-10-2019, 09:32 AM by Jonathan Whatley.)
(05-10-2019, 12:52 AM)dfrecore Wrote: That's way overpriced for a MA degree from a no-name school. There's just no point.
If you're going to spend $20k for a MA/MBA, there are plenty of places where you can do so and get other benefits like networking.
COSC's MS OEL is currently #26, in the middle of the pack, among GetEducated's Best Buy master's degrees in leadership. It would also place mid-pack if we inserted it among their Best Buy master's in management or the Best Buy master's in nonprofit management.
I see the case that a B&M with a decently ranked traditional undergraduate program, on-campus recruiting, and alumni association with a very extensive face-to-face event schedule has some things Charter Oak doesn't.
For some students, this could be a significant value add. For others, I don't think it would mean all that much. Regional B&M X comes out a few thousand cheaper than Charter Oak. If I'm not in their region, am I going to be flying to their B&M events? Are their alumni networks on LinkedIn or Facebook going to do much for me that Charter Oak's couldn't?
Conversely, some prospective students will value that Charter Oak is a distance-first institution since 1973. Their distance programs aren't a second tier, they aren't ironing out the kinks in their learning platform, and there isn't a for-profit online program management company between the student and school. They have a real alumni association too.
The COSC MS OEL also has no undergraduate prerequisites. That's often a barrier or added cost for master's in this subject space.
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I'm not opposed to the cost for graduate credit, and I'm not even opposed to using one of the big 3 for a graduate credit - but in that same price tier, there are just a million other options that give you a little more oomph.
Once upon a time, I'd considered their program that allows you to start your masters inside your bachelor's (for undergrad tuition price) but didn't because if I changed my mind, I wouldn't be able to use that credit elsewhere (I found time and time again grad credit restrictions on having already used that credit would exclude it).
In my opinion, if your undergrad is in something general, grad school should be more specific.
If your undergrad is from a noname school, grad school should be from a better name.
Since my undergrad was both general and noname, I picked a program that was both specific and highly regarded. (which cost more than I would have paid at the big 3 but it was a good match for me)
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