I am the Assistant Director of Admissions for (((REDACTED BY ROR))) University. I work for the online devesion and I have heard many stories just like the ones here. Matter of fact the reason I was on this site is because a student got ripped off by the same company and I was doing some research trying to help her. I'm really sorry to hear about all of your stories.
There are alot of schools out there that are offering to let you go to school online and making you promises that they have no way of keeping. However there are also schools out there that will allow you to earn your degree taking the courses on line. If you noticed I said schools that will allow you earn your degree online. Those are some key words.
South Univeristy is a tradinal campus in Savannah, GA. We have been around since 1899 so as you see we have over 100 years of education behind us. We started offering some of our degree programs online about 5 years ago. South Univeristy realized the need for adults to earn their degree while working full time to support their family. It would a student anywhere between 6 to 8 yrs to earn a bachelor degree unless they are able to quit their jobs and go to school full time. Then they would earn a bachelor degree in 4 years. 69% of the employeers require a degree. Less then 21% of the American Adults have one. Its getting harder and harder to find a job that doesn't require you to have that degree. It doesn't matter how many years of experience you have in that field if you don't have that degree the job will go to someone who does. This is why South University started offering some of thier degre programs online and why there are thousands of online schools out there now.
When you are talking to any school regardless if it is a ground campus or online there are some very important questions you should be asking. I will list some of them for you. I hope that it helps.
1. What accreditation does the school hold should ALWAYS be the first question you ask.
**The goal of accreditation is to ensure that education provided by institutions of higher education meets acceptable levels of quality. Here you will find lists of regional and national accrediting agencies recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education as reliable authorities concerning the quality of education or training offered by the institutions of higher education or higher education programs they accredit.** Ed.gov
There are two types of accreditation you should look for: Regional and National
Schools that hold a Regional Accredition are more widely acknowledged by employeers and other colleges. If you are a student that wants to transfer your credits and you earned them from a school that holds a Regional Accreditation you will have a lot easier time then if they came from a school that hold a National Accreditation. It is ALWAYS up to the school that is receiving the credits to determine what comes in. If you ever have a school tell you that the credits you earn through them will all be transferred, RUN!!! No school can make you that promise. On the same note, if you have a school that is telling you that they will accept all of your credits, RUN!!! We will not tell our students anything about TOC until we have a copy of thier transcripts and have had those reviewed. If a school does not hold either a Regional or National Accreditation then you will be getting ripped off. It has to be accreditied for it to be recognized.
2. If you are looking at going into any legal studies or paralegal studies program regardless if it is a ground campus or online you want to ask if it is ABA approved. Again if it is not then you are being ripped off. Our online paralegal studies is ABA approved however there are four classes that have to be taken at a ground campus. This is ABA ordered.
3. Ask about your instructors. Ask what type of degree the instructors hold and if they are required to have worked in the field they are teaching.
4. If going into an online program ask them to walk you into a classroom so that you can see how it works.
5. No school can promise you job placement!!!! If they do then RUN. You maybe a great student but really bad at interviews so how can they promise you a job. Yes some schools find thier students a job however 98% of them are not in the field they went to school for.
6. Ask what it takes to be accepted as a student into their school. If all you have to do is write a one paragraph essay on why you want to go to school RUN!! That should be a clue as to what kind of school it is. Our students have to have a high school deploma or GED and 20 semester college credits with a GPA 2.0 or higher or they will have to take the college placement test. We will not put a student into a class that they are not ready to be in. This is only setting that student up to fail.
7. You do not have to have an associates degree before earning your bachelor degree. I don't recommend an associates degree, except for the paralegal studies program, to anyone unless you are just finishing high school. You will only get the general ed courses with an associates degree. You get the same gerenal ed courses taking the bachelor degree program along with what you will really need to know in the work force. The reason schools put you into the associates degree first is because they know this and they will get double the amount of tiution from you. It will also take you twice as long to earn your degree. Why waste the time and money?
8. If you are going online you want to ask them about any fees that are not being disclosed to you. There are alot of hidden fees they dont tell you about until you are in class. Be careful of this.
9. Ask them if there are set times and dates that you are required to be logged into your classroom. Also ask if they require group (team) work. What that means is that you and your group all have to be online at the same time completing your assignment. If one person from your group doesn't do their share of the work then the whole group will lose points. I don't think I want my grades to depend on someone else. Do you?
I'm sure there are many more questions that you should be asking when you are talking to any school that I can't think of right off the top of my head. I hope this helps any student that wants to go back to school. Please don't let one school keep you from doing something that you want and need. I also suggest that you contact the Attorney General's Office and file a complaint against this school.
sorry, …allowing you to give a competitors name would instigate others to just file against their competition, to only come back later to suggest their company, ..plus, if you post a competitors name more than likely they will show up on search engines as a Rip-off! - - your comments on this policy are welcome. CLICK here to see why Rip-off Report, as a matter of policy, deleted either a phone number, link or e-mail address from this Report. In this case we removed an alleged competitor's name Sincerly,
Dawnia Young