03-04-2025, 12:52 AM
(02-26-2025, 07:29 PM)3ichael7ambert Wrote:(02-26-2025, 04:49 PM)Maniac Craniac Wrote:(02-26-2025, 04:36 PM)3ichael7ambert Wrote:(02-08-2025, 12:10 PM)Maniac Craniac Wrote: For my own curiosity, since I'm a lover of certificate aesthetics, what does the noncredit certificate look like? I couldn't find it on LinkedIn or Google.
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/stephen-w...a5kR5x5KJo
Looks like this except it says:
Global Management, Entrepreneurship and Innovation Advanced Program
Thanks. That's a bit of a disappointment. It's a free certificate that looks like a free certificate, so maybe the disappointment is well-deserved for me hoping for something better. Also, for caring about what a certificate looks like when the real point is to experience the program. But, eh, it's just a thing I like.
No, I get it and I agree.
The knowledge and practice, is well earned and applicable in the workforce. It’s 1:1 of their paid content.
However an employer, would see it as how you just described, a free ‘worthless certificate’. Unless we are already employed, and using this to enhance our skill sets.
The free-free aspect of it, it’s not worth our time in my opinion, because an employer wouldn’t be impressed if we showed them the free certificate.
How we list it on our resume can be complicated, if we don’t pay we should list it as the 100 Million Learners Program not ASU/Thunderbird.
Which is odd, paywall to success?
I took Harvard’s free CS50 course which is well known in tech and this exact same concept. I didn’t go to Harvard but took their free courses?
Why would you not list it as from ASU?
Doesn't it say ASU on the certificate?