Posted on 02/09/2020 6:26:45 AM PST by karpov
bmp
Wondering. Will these credits transfer to University of Michigan? Rice? Chico State? CUNY?
In other words, what’s the academic rigor of these classes?
And that’s the kicker, accreditation.
IMHO it’s a scheme between colleges and corporations to keep people from getting degrees cheaply and rapidly.
Where?
In the 2009 obama federal takeover of student loans?
At Baylor university? Where the dean of student takes $5 million annually?
Some colleges limit the number of credit hours they will accept from other institutions, but this is not a problem for our students. Except for some of the toniest of private institutions, colleges generally accept two or more years of transfer credit toward a degree. The most common problem with course-transfer is that some courses do not align precisely with a similar course required at a particular college. In such cases, the student still receives credit for their transferred coursework but may also have to take the colleges required course. Given the fairly generic coverage of general education courses, this is usually not an issue for our courses.
This is all the taxpayers really need to be on the hook for. Unless the student is a very high achiever, we shouldnt be investing a lot of money. All the liberal colleges and universities can find the funding elsewhere.
Today’s universities are extremely overpriced indoctrination centers.
But, new paradigms are emerging rapidly. Folks can’t justify pretending that colleges are relevant anymore.
Rigor went out the window years ago at our colleges and universities.
And is TEL accredited?
Or, one could say, rigor has set in.....
:D
Hoss
University of Michigan? Rice? Chico State? CUNY?
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
These places are rigorous? Gee! Who knew?
In the SOTU speech, Trump said his admin is supporting a return of vo-tech classes to high schools.
Another nail in the coffin of “we need illegals for jobs Americans wont
Do not accuse me of being anti Christian.
Especially related to my criticism of the party school
Look it up. Heres a start.
Baylor University’s Kenneth Starr was the highest-paid leader of any private university nationwide in 2016.
That’s according to the latest report from The Chronicle of Higher Education, which compiled a database detailing salaries of 1,400 top university officials. The data include compensation of leaders at more than 600 private colleges from 2008-16 and nearly 250 public universities and systems from 2010-17.
In the SOTU speech, Trump said his admin is supporting a return of vo-tech classes in high schools.
Many contractors hire illegals not only to save money, but because illegals have the basic carpentry, bricklaying, mechanical skills that Americans once-upon-a-time learned in high school shop classes.
Starr, No. 1 on the list, left Baylor in 2016 amid a scandal over the school’s handling of sexual assault accusations against football players. That year Starr received nearly $5 million, most of which came from a severance agreement he negotiated with the school, according to the Chronicle. The year before, he made $1.4 million.
Christian, hmm?
I agree. On line courses are a great idea for lowering the price of an education, but if the credits aren’t accepted by other colleges they’re useless and that’s the rub-who decides which courses are rigorous or ‘politically correct’ enough to qualify?
Amberdawn wrote:
“I agree. On line courses are a great idea for lowering the price of an education, but if the credits arent accepted by other colleges theyre useless and thats the rub-who decides which courses are rigorous or politically correct enough to qualify?”
Exactly- the ones in power decide what’s acceptable.
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