12-20-2017, 11:35 PM
(12-19-2017, 10:54 PM)shawn Wrote: @ Sagan
Going to apologize if this sounds combative, not my intention, but to answer your reply I may have to sound like it.
First, the entrance exam is not a small step. I oversee physical and military training for myself and over 60 individuals. Anytime I have to dedicate to schooling I would prefer to dedicate to the actual courses.
Second, while I did not mention it completely before. As I stated before, I partly owe my success in obtaining my Bachelor's and MBA to people like Sanantone and DFRECORE. Therefore, as you might had guessed it, I tested out of my Bachelor's and used a competency program for my MBA. My academic record in some people's eyes may look good, in others it is confusing. Furthermore, I mentioned my work history to expand the recommendations that people were giving me. I can show at least three years of management experience but it is military. I have spoken with some Universities, and they are iffy about accepting it. Some will not consider it as management experience, most will not accept it as business experience. This means in the eyes of some universities I lack a good educational background and work experience. A double tap, academically speaking.
For third, please see first and second.
As for Capella and Walden, well, I did not make any actual comments about them. I genuinely tried to preserve distance. Nevertheless, I stand by my decision to omit them from my decision process. Also please see Sanantone's post.
Lastly, I appreciate this board because the people here are mostly non-combative and helpful. This board is for nontraditional schooling, and my route has been nontraditional. Because of that, I stay away from combative boards that preach traditional schooling methods. As mentioned before, I am a long time lurker and first time poster.
Thank you.
@ Sanantone
I have been speaking with one of the universities mentioned here, Cumberlands. I admit that I do not understand how accreditation works. The university in question lacks programmatic accreditation for the program but it is regionally accredited. Is it possible for a program to not fall under the university's regional accreditation?
An updated list, please critique:
Argosy University
Baker College
Franklin University
Liberty University
University of the Cumberlands
University of South Alabama
South Alabama is probably the most prestigious. However, I may not be able to fulfill their 5 year business experience requirement. I plan to contact them and see what they say.
For my second choice, it remains a draw between Argosy, Liberty and Cumberlands. Please critique them, if you have any experience with them.
Kennesaw looked promising but I am guessing their program changed. As I was told it is no longer an online program but a full residency program.
(12-20-2017, 12:32 AM)sanantone Wrote:You have every right to exclude colleges based on reputation especially at the Doctorate level. Even a school like U of Phoenix you will have to put in some work and in the end have a piece of paper people will scoff at. Not to trash U of P but pedigree matters at the masters and beyond. Is a necessary for your Phd to be in business admin? From my experience, the business sectors cares about track record, skills and name of MBA in that order. If your long path is in the military than I would not have input on that. But to me, a DBA or Phd in business admin seems like a path to teach business pretty much. If a PHd is what you need to stand out in the military, perhaps looking at a public admin or public policy from a decent state school would make you stand out.(12-19-2017, 11:20 PM)Sagan Wrote: It would seem the Walden case has not moved much (or at all) in the last year. Nor does it appear to have been certified as a class-action. ON the other hand, it has not been dismissed, either. Still, it would behoove potential students considering Walden to consider the complaint and it possible merits. Bear in mind, however, that a complaint may not necessarily be upheld.
The lawsuit may not go anywhere, but the turnover of faculty is something to consider when pursuing a doctorate.
(12-19-2017, 10:54 PM)shawn Wrote: @ Sagan
Going to apologize if this sounds combative, not my intention, but to answer your reply I may have to sound like it.
First, the entrance exam is not a small step. I oversee physical and military training for myself and over 60 individuals. Anytime I have to dedicate to schooling I would prefer to dedicate to the actual courses.
Second, while I did not mention it completely before. As I stated before, I partly owe my success in obtaining my Bachelor's and MBA to people like Sanantone and DFRECORE. Therefore, as you might had guessed it, I tested out of my Bachelor's and used a competency program for my MBA. My academic record in some people's eyes may look good, in others it is confusing. Furthermore, I mentioned my work history to expand the recommendations that people were giving me. I can show at least three years of management experience but it is military. I have spoken with some Universities, and they are iffy about accepting it. Some will not consider it as management experience, most will not accept it as business experience. This means in the eyes of some universities I lack a good educational background and work experience. A double tap, academically speaking.
For third, please see first and second.
As for Capella and Walden, well, I did not make any actual comments about them. I genuinely tried to preserve distance. Nevertheless, I stand by my decision to omit them from my decision process. Also please see Sanantone's post.
Lastly, I appreciate this board because the people here are mostly non-combative and helpful. This board is for nontraditional schooling, and my route has been nontraditional. Because of that, I stay away from combative boards that preach traditional schooling methods. As mentioned before, I am a long time lurker and first time poster.
Thank you.
@ Sanantone
I have been speaking with one of the universities mentioned here, Cumberlands. I admit that I do not understand how accreditation works. The university in question lacks programmatic accreditation for the program but it is regionally accredited. Is it possible for a program to not fall under the university's regional accreditation?
An updated list, please critique:
Argosy University
Baker College
Franklin University
Liberty University
University of the Cumberlands
University of South Alabama
South Alabama is probably the most prestigious. However, I may not be able to fulfill their 5 year business experience requirement. I plan to contact them and see what they say.
For my second choice, it remains a draw between Argosy, Liberty and Cumberlands. Please critique them, if you have any experience with them.
Kennesaw looked promising but I am guessing their program changed. As I was told it is no longer an online program but a full residency program.
The doctoral program falls under the school's regional accreditation. They just lack optional, programmatic accreditation such as AACSB, ACBSP, and IACBE. Those are mostly important if you want to teach at a school that has one of those accreditations.
The "sister" forum has a few people who have attended University of the Cumberlands, but for their Phd program in leadership. University of the Cumberlands and Liberty university are very conservative, Christian schools. Some people like that, some people hate it, and some people don't mind.