I graduated last year and was thinking about taking another Masters class or two. Yesterday I received an email about "black November", but in order to view/access the deals they want me to pay to re-enroll for $85.00. So, on top of the price for the black November deal, I'd be required to pay an additional "re-enrollment" fee?
Anyone else receive that specific re-enrollment email?
This is a great point and crucial (IMO) that ENEB does issue grades, regardless of methodology.
I don't know about state jobs, but for US federal positions, a lot of government agencies won't accept degrees from colleges/universities that only has a pass/fail grading system, no GPA, and/or for-profit schools, (a family member recently had issues applying to government jobs because of this issue).
For example: from recently posted government jobs that I found, ("No more than 10% of academic credit can be based on pass/fail." and This position is open to "Any individual who was awarded a degree by an institution of higher education from a PUBLIC or other non-profit institution...")
Anyone else receive that specific re-enrollment email?
(11-08-2024, 11:28 AM)nykorn Wrote: "Second, when it comes to employers, licensing, and State/Federal employment, again, while some may not ask, many will ask for a letter grade and a body of academic work that shows you have graduate-level writing, comprehension and skills."
ENEB degrees DO give you a letter grade, and thus a GPA, regardless of if you use the test format or the exam format.
The rest must heavily depend on the field.
I've graduated from two, and am soon to graduate a third, school which has only pass/fail and no GPA. There have been no issues whatsoever with employers so far, no one has even asked me about it. They have also never asked for any coursework samples, haven't asked about my final thesis, or anything like that. Sometimes they do "suggest" that I upload work samples from previous employment but I have never gotten proof they actually looked at them.
This is a great point and crucial (IMO) that ENEB does issue grades, regardless of methodology.
I don't know about state jobs, but for US federal positions, a lot of government agencies won't accept degrees from colleges/universities that only has a pass/fail grading system, no GPA, and/or for-profit schools, (a family member recently had issues applying to government jobs because of this issue).
For example: from recently posted government jobs that I found, ("No more than 10% of academic credit can be based on pass/fail." and This position is open to "Any individual who was awarded a degree by an institution of higher education from a PUBLIC or other non-profit institution...")