10-25-2006, 07:32 PM
ShotoJuku Wrote:[COLOR="Navy"]
[SIZE="3"]This is true but not always correct insofar as an NA degree can fit the bill in many fields and/or employers requirements.
The bottom line is however without any form of RA or NA accreditation the "degree" is most likely from a degree/diploma mill.
Caveat Emptor - "Let The Buyer Beware!"[/SIZE][/COLOR]
I say that specifically NA isn't better than RA because nearly everyone unfamiliar with acreditation will assume that national is better or the same as regional.
Regional is still the standard - everyone will take RA. National is accepted alot of the time, but not always (my job for instance won't accept it)..... and theological/vocationals are rarely accepted outside of their field, though they might be far and away the best education for that field of study.
It just depends on what your purpose for the degree is. If you just want a degree for the sake of having a degree, or to move onto a grad program, it seems by far the safest is to go after an RA degree...because that leaves open the most opportunities.
[SIZE="1"]CLEPS:
[COLOR="green"]Social Sciences and History
College Math
English Composition (no essay) [/COLOR]
DANTES:
[COLOR="green"]World Religions
Civil War and Reconstruction
Drug & Alcohol Abuse
Management Information Systems [/COLOR]
Excelsior:
[COLOR="Green"]Organizational Behavior
Ethics: Theory and Practice
World Conflicts since 1900
World Population [/COLOR][/SIZE]
All done! 42 credits by exam
[COLOR="green"]Social Sciences and History
College Math
English Composition (no essay) [/COLOR]
DANTES:
[COLOR="green"]World Religions
Civil War and Reconstruction
Drug & Alcohol Abuse
Management Information Systems [/COLOR]
Excelsior:
[COLOR="Green"]Organizational Behavior
Ethics: Theory and Practice
World Conflicts since 1900
World Population [/COLOR][/SIZE]
All done! 42 credits by exam