Posts: 67
Threads: 9
Likes Received: 1 in 1 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Nov 2013
I am trying to compare the total degree cost some have that have gone an alternative route to traditional college.
I am setting a bit higher for my recent graduate, but am working with another of my kids in this journey.
My recent graduate did DSST, CLEPS, Community College and graduated from UMUC.edu in 2.5 yrs of this and I spent a total of $29,800 for her 4 year degree. I am trying to get my next kid's cheaper.
•
Posts: 575
Threads: 52
Likes Received: 32 in 20 posts
Likes Given: 1
Joined: Mar 2016
(04-19-2018, 01:49 PM)lprstn Wrote: I am trying to compare the total degree cost some have that have gone an alternative route to traditional college.
I am setting a bit higher for my recent graduate, but am working with another of my kids in this journey.
My recent graduate did DSST, CLEPS, Community College and graduated from UMUC.edu in 2.5 yrs of this and I spent a total of $29,800 for her 4 year degree. I am trying to get my next kid's cheaper.
My son received his bachelors degree in business last fall at WGU (after completing over 90 credits via Straighterline, Study.com, Ed4Credit, ALEKS, and Sophia Pathways) - our total cost ended up being $3,200.
Here Researching for my son, who has done the following:
Community College: Intro to Philosophy, Fundamentals of IT, English Comp 1
Saylor: Intro to Business, Principles of Marketing, Corporate Communication
Shmoop: US History 2 (WGU won't accept this)
ALEKS: Int. Algebra, College Algebra
Study.com: Personal Finance, Principles of Finance, HR Management, Global Business, Advanced Operations Management
Straighterline: US History 2, Environmental Science, US History, Microeconomics, Macroeconomics, English Comp 2, Principles of Management, Business Law, Business Ethics, Psychology, Organizational Behavior, Accounting 1,Communication, Managerial Accounting, Statistics
Ed4Credit: Managing Information Systems
Sophia: Project Management
WGU: Bachelors in HR Management
Second son is currently attending Penn Foster for his high school diploma, then on to Ashworth for An Associates in Criminal Justice
Posts: 2,142
Threads: 135
Likes Received: 210 in 130 posts
Likes Given: 181
Joined: Jun 2010
Back in 2011, I used almost all CLEP/DSST. There were a few SL classes, but not nearly like what exists today. However, I only had to pay for a Capstone, no Cornerstone needed.
So, with all that you see below and COSC expenses, I was around $6k. I think with Shmoop (hate it, but it's cheap) today you could save a ton of money over testing.
Regis University, ITESO, Global MBA with a focus in Emerging Markets 4.0 GPA, Dual-university degree (Spanish/English)
ISSA Certified Nutritionist
COSC BS, Business Admin
My BS Credits:
Spanish 80 | Humanities 67 | A & I Lit 72 | Sub Abuse 452 | Bus Ethics 445 | Tech Writ 62 | Math 53 | HTYH 454 | Am. Govt 65 | Env & Humanity 64 | Marketing 65 | Micro 61| Mgmt 63| Org Behavior 65| MIS 446|Computing 432 | BL II 61 | M&B 50 | Finance 411 | Supervision 437| Intro Bus. 439| Law Enforcement 63| SL: Accounting I B | Accounting II C+| Macro A | ECE: Labor Relations A | Capstone: A| FEMA PDS Cert
Posts: 3,505
Threads: 136
Likes Received: 643 in 506 posts
Likes Given: 918
Joined: Mar 2017
Last year, a person could still test out of the BSBA capstone at TESU. (Capstone is at least $1098.)
Also it depends on what kind of degree. For example, a BALS is about the cheapest, but a degree in Biology would require a bunch of lab courses at around $1100 each.
•
Posts: 10,296
Threads: 353
Likes Received: 60 in 22 posts
Likes Given: 1,406
Joined: Mar 2007
04-19-2018, 06:55 PM
(This post was last modified: 04-19-2018, 06:58 PM by cookderosa.)
When I did my AA & BA from TESU, both were just about 6k too. I have kept track of all the costs of college credit my kids have earned/are earning.
I think rather then squeezing every penny, you have to break it down into resourceful college planning vs paying rack rate. Anything you do that reduces your rack rate is a win imo.
Regular community college averages $100/credit, so if you did your first 1/2 there, you're in for about $6000. Then, regular in-state public universities average around $400 per credit, so figure another $24000 which puts you at about $30k rack rate. (for those STARTING at the 4-year uni, I'll just shake my head...)
So, you can reduce that SIGNIFICANTLY during the 100/200 level credit years. In fact, I think you can get that cost down to a couple thousand if you price shop / credit shop and STILL go to a 4 year uni and pay rack rate. If you find a college that is generous with accepting CLEP/AP or even ACE, you can probably get that into 1-2 thousand. If you have the opportunity to get free dual enrollment like my state (NC) that is $0 tuition for the associate's degree.
If you can find a 4 year uni under $400/credit, that guarantees transfer of the first 50, that awards upper level credit for DSST exams, and that allows you to study via distance learning (saving on dorm fees) you can really shave costs.
Further, if a parent is willing to change jobs and start working at a college (even as a cook or janitor) you can almost always get free tuition for your kids. There are a lot of things you can do, and I think that most parent's default into the "scholarship question" which is really (IMO) the wrong question. For many people, they can look at a price tag and say "wow, I'm saving 50%, so this is a great deal" while others will say "forget the percentage, tell me the dollars" so it depends on what point of view you take. My son could have taken an athletic scholarship, but it would have required him to borrow over 50k vs MY PLAN which means we are all in for about 10k lol. Again, it's not right/wrong but I think there are many ways to get the costs down.
PS to add, military is also still offering free tuition.
•
Posts: 110
Threads: 3
Likes Received: 18 in 7 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Oct 2007
$1480
USNY - BSb in Accounting with approx. 130 semester hours of credit
mid 1980s. all but 9 credits by exam.
includes enrollment fees, test fees, couple of correspondence courses, all books, graduation fees.
•
Posts: 2,859
Threads: 143
Likes Received: 1,700 in 1,000 posts
Likes Given: 825
Joined: Jun 2017
(04-19-2018, 06:55 PM)cookderosa Wrote: PS to add, military is also still offering free tuition.
Yes and no. People who served in the military don't pay for their tuition with money but they do pay.
WGU BSIT Complete January 2022
(77CU transferred in)(44/44CU )
RA(non WGU)(57cr)
JST/TESU Eval of NAVY Training(85/99cr)
The Institutes, TEEX, NFA(9cr): Ethics, Cyber 101/201/301, Safety
Sophia(60cr): 23 classes
Study.com(31cr): Eng105, Fin102, His108, LibSci101, Math104, Stat101, CS107, CS303, BUS107
CLEP(9cr): Intro Sociology 63 Intro Psych 61 US GOV 71
OD(12cr): Robotics, Cyber, Programming, Microecon
CSM(3cr)
Various IT/Cybersecurity Certifications from: CompTIA, Google, Microsoft, AWS, GIAC, LPI, IBM
CS Fund. MicroBachelor(3cr)
Posts: 16,325
Threads: 148
Likes Received: 5,484 in 3,748 posts
Likes Given: 367
Joined: Apr 2013
You can get a BSBA or BALS at TESU for less than $3500 if you utilize all of the different ways to get cheap/free credits - free credits through Sophia, NFA, The Institutes, 6 free courses through the Guardian/Study.com scholarship, multiple courses through Shmoop, $25 courses through Saylor, and as many courses as you can pass for free using the ModernStates/CLEP partnership (free CLEP tests and even reimbursement of test center fees).
That amount will change when the Study.com affiliate membership agreement expires on 6/30 - prices will go up. But, it should still be under $4,000.
For that price, I would say that you should definitely take some classes at your local CC (it's kind of a drag to take EVERYTHING online, take some interesting things from some good professors at college), and even take some more expensive UL courses in your major at another school - things that really interest you and you want to really delve into. Get the rest through testing out/online courses, and you've got yourself a pretty good degree.
And like Jennifer likes to say, if you've got a kid who wants a higher degree like a master's, you should DEFINITELY spend as little as possible on the BA, and then you can splurge a bit on the MA.
TESU BSBA/HR 2018 - WVNCC BOG AAS 2017 - GGU Cert in Mgmt 2000
EXAMS: TECEP Tech Wrtg, Comp II, LA Math, PR, Computers DSST Computers, Pers Fin CLEP Mgmt, Mktg
COURSES: TESU Capstone Study.com Pers Fin, Microecon, Stats Ed4Credit Acct 2 PF Fin Mgmt ALEKS Int & Coll Alg Sophia Proj Mgmt The Institutes - Ins Ethics Kaplan PLA
Posts: 1,491
Threads: 102
Likes Received: 94 in 69 posts
Likes Given: 5
Joined: May 2010
I'd have to add up all of the years of lost income and add that.
63 CLEP Sociology
75 CLEP U.S. History II
63 CLEP College Algebra
70 CLEP Analyzing and Interpreting Literature
68 DSST Technical Writing
72 CLEP U.S. History I
77 CLEP College Mathematics
470 DSST Statistics
53 CLEP College Composition
73 CLEP Biology
54 CLEP Chemistry
77 CLEP Information Systems and Computer Applications
•
Posts: 252
Threads: 7
Likes Received: 173 in 101 posts
Likes Given: 212
Joined: Nov 2017
Guess it's all relative to your circumstances. I haven't lost any income finishing school.
MSK9, MD
Resident Physician
•
|