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Amberton Bachelor's Experience? - SCYankee - 02-26-2023

Currently, I'm considering a few options to knock out this BSBA. Excelsior is fastest, easiest and cheapest. But it still may not be the way I want to go.

Amberton is also on my list, with their Bachelor of Human Services and Business. Amberton requires 33 credits be taken from them, including 27 upper level credits.

So my question is, what's your experience with Amberton:

1. More/less/same writing as other alt college options? (like WGU, UMPI, etc.)
2. Test focused or writing focused?
3. Lots of citations needed in writing?
4. Do they do the "post in discussions and comment on other posts with citations" thing? (this whole idea seems silly to me)
5. Anything else you'd like to share?

I understand the advantage of getting a degree fast at Excelsior vs taking more classes at Amberton, so I don't need that guidance. This is just a part of quantifying everything for my own decision-making process.

Thanks.


RE: Amberton Bachelor's Experience? - ss20ts - 02-26-2023

I completed my MBA at Amberton. I do know they are not super open to ACE credits. They are very selective with them.

I had very few tests. Many of my classes had an undergrad version with the same professor. Most classes are papers and projects. Yes, you need citations. Some classes have discussions. Some don't. Yes, citations are needed.

For a bachelor's in bus admin, UMPI is really the fastest unless you dislike writing. You can complete almost 90 credits on Sophia alone and then complete the remaining needed courses at UMPI where you have to complete a minimum of 30 credits. Most people are able to complete their degree at UMPI 2 sessions which is 16 weeks.


RE: Amberton Bachelor's Experience? - dfrecore - 02-26-2023

(02-26-2023, 03:07 PM)ss20ts Wrote: I completed my MBA at Amberton. I do know they are not super open to ACE credits. They are very selective with them.

I had very few tests. Many of my classes had an undergrad version with the same professor. Most classes are papers and projects. Yes, you need citations. Some classes have discussions. Some don't. Yes, citations are needed.

For a bachelor's in bus admin, UMPI is really the fastest unless you dislike writing. You can complete almost 90 credits on Sophia alone and then complete the remaining needed courses at UMPI where you have to complete a minimum of 30 credits. Most people are able to complete their degree at UMPI 2 sessions which is 16 weeks.

I'm not sure that UMPI has more writing than Excelsior; if it's anything like TESU, then the Excelsior capstone is going to be a LOT of writing (25+ pages for the final paper, 7 writing assignments at 1-2 pages each, and discussion posts every week at TESU).  So, it's not going to be 1 paper per course like UMPI, but it's going to be writing-heavy for at least the capstone and possibly the info lit and cornerstone courses.


RE: Amberton Bachelor's Experience? - SCYankee - 02-27-2023

(02-26-2023, 11:57 PM)dfrecore Wrote:
(02-26-2023, 03:07 PM)ss20ts Wrote: I completed my MBA at Amberton. I do know they are not super open to ACE credits. They are very selective with them.

I had very few tests. Many of my classes had an undergrad version with the same professor. Most classes are papers and projects. Yes, you need citations. Some classes have discussions. Some don't. Yes, citations are needed.

For a bachelor's in bus admin, UMPI is really the fastest unless you dislike writing. You can complete almost 90 credits on Sophia alone and then complete the remaining needed courses at UMPI where you have to complete a minimum of 30 credits. Most people are able to complete their degree at UMPI 2 sessions which is 16 weeks.

I'm not sure that UMPI has more writing than Excelsior; if it's anything like TESU, then the Excelsior capstone is going to be a LOT of writing (25+ pages for the final paper, 7 writing assignments at 1-2 pages each, and discussion posts every week at TESU).  So, it's not going to be 1 paper per course like UMPI, but it's going to be writing-heavy for at least the capstone and possibly the info lit and cornerstone courses.

Thanks. I guess I'll have to see if there are any threads about EU capstone then. And if not, start a thread.

(02-26-2023, 03:07 PM)ss20ts Wrote: I completed my MBA at Amberton. I do know they are not super open to ACE credits. They are very selective with them.

I had very few tests. Many of my classes had an undergrad version with the same professor. Most classes are papers and projects. Yes, you need citations. Some classes have discussions. Some don't. Yes, citations are needed.

For a bachelor's in bus admin, UMPI is really the fastest unless you dislike writing. You can complete almost 90 credits on Sophia alone and then complete the remaining needed courses at UMPI where you have to complete a minimum of 30 credits. Most people are able to complete their degree at UMPI 2 sessions which is 16 weeks.

I really like the idea of a degree in Human Services and Business. I am a business owner and work very hard to understand and serve my clients well. But ultimately, I'm not sure it matters so much what the paper says as how fast I can finish it at this point. I spent a lot of time on courses and CLEPs/DSSTs, was stalled by the whole Covid deal (in fact, wasn't able to take the World Religions CLEP r DSST I had been studying hard for). I'd like to finish it up now.

If I go for the Master's, which is in my mind, then I'll be ready for the writing Smile


RE: Amberton Bachelor's Experience? - allvia - 02-27-2023

It is 'Human Relations and Business' not Human Services. I would save it for your Master.  At Amberton if you take the undergrad version of a class you cannot again take it for the graduate level. It wasn't always clear what the difference between the two were, but generally it seemed there were additional assignments or projects for the graduate versions. I never compared the undergrad vs grad syllabuses that closely, but you can. I would defiantly recommend Amberton for a graduate degree - and in the case of the Human Relations and Business degree it is quite flexible for course options. Of course if you don't have plans for a master then it could be a good fit. Also, they will only take RA courses for transfer in (not alternative credit friendly, just traditional credit friendly); in the case of graduate they will only transfer in courses worth three credits.


RE: Amberton Bachelor's Experience? - bjcheung77 - 03-01-2023

Amberton's a great 'adult learner' university, it's geared for that niche... I think they've set their audience to exactly that, helping adults complete their education at an affordable price point. Having said that, I'd go with them only at the Masters level, as you can get a Bachelors cheaper, easier, faster with the recommended alternative credit institutions we already recommend. Amberton's Masters option are affordable and the 12 credit transfer credit they allow at the masters level is very appealing as well...


RE: Amberton Bachelor's Experience? - ss20ts - 03-01-2023

(03-01-2023, 01:39 PM)bjcheung77 Wrote: Amberton's a great 'adult learner' university, it's geared for that niche... I think they've set their audience to exactly that, helping adults complete their education at an affordable price point.  Having said that, I'd go with them only at the Masters level, as you can get a Bachelors cheaper, easier, faster with the recommended alternative credit institutions we already recommend.  Amberton's Masters option are affordable and the 12 credit transfer credit they allow at the masters level is very appealing as well...

That 12 transfer credits is kind of tricky. The courses must be 3 credits each and be RA credit. Also every master's degree doesn't have room for extra courses so transfer credits may not be helpful. There's 1 degree where transfer credit works the easiest - the MA in Professional Development, but the credits must fall under specific areas (subjects).