Friday, Sep 03, 2010
Login

Posts Tagged ‘online degree programs’

Making The Decision To Go To LU

All of you who have been reading my blogs recently know that I have been actively searching for my next degree.  I knew that when I completed my MBA from Hawaii Pacific University that my academic career as a student was not over or at least I knew I had enough vinegar left to do one more degree at least.  I consider learning to be a lifelong pursuit but even I have to admit that enough is enough when it comes to actually obtaining that next degree.  At some point it just doesn’t make sense to keep going, to keep sacrificing and to keep having your family make sacrifices.  Sometimes you just have to know when to walk away.  A day will come when you have to admit to yourself that you can’t keep doing this indefinitely.  Fortunately this isn’t that day!

libertyedu_logoI have decided to attend online at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Virginia.  I will be working towards a Master of Arts in Professional Counseling with a focus on Clinical Psychology.  Given that I have no psychology background, I still have to take a number of undergraduate psychology courses as pre-requisites.  Anyhow there are a number of reasons I have decided to attend LU.

First, they are inexpensive.  This is the one of the single most important things to me right now.  It has to be accessible and to be accessible it has to be inexpensive.  In fact the school has a payment plan that allows you to spread the tuition payments over 5 even sums at given times throughout the semester.  How thoughtful.

Estimated Costs 2008-2009

 

  Average Local Honors
Tuition/Room*/Board/Fees $21,234 $21,234 $21,234
ScholarshipsChampion
EDA
Pastor
Alumni
Academic (average)
Virginia Scholarship
SBCV
Virginia Tuition Assistance Grant
Honors   

$1,000
$500
$500
$500
$2,000
NA
NA
NA
NA


$1,000
$500
$500
$500
$2,000
$1,000
$1,000
$3,200
NA
$1,000
$500
$500
$500
$3,000
NA
NA
NA
$3,750
Total Scholarships $5,000 $10,200 $9,750
Total estimated cost/year $17,234 $12,034 $12,484
Total estimated cost/semester $8,617 $6,017 $6,242

Source: Liberty University

Second, they are regionally accredited.  This is a big deal because I intend to use this degree become a licensed psychologist and to immediately enter a doctoral program in psychology.

Third, with the 8 week sub-terms, I will still be able to complete my second Master’s degree by 2011 and then immediately enter a doctoral program.  Also, I will be getting high quality Christian education and develop the ability to use the Bible in counseling sessions. Like most investments, it makes sense to diversify.  This is the big winner over my second runner up, Nova Southeastern University.

Fourth, Since Liberty University has both residential and online programs; I can choose to take any course on campus if I feel the need to. Residential students can take online courses as well.

Now some cons that I have discovered, or at the very least some concerns.

First, the learning software is Blackboard.  Since January 2008 was my first semester at LU, and I had never taken an online course before, I had to spend a few extra hours learning what Blackboard had to offer and how the courses are structured. 
 
Second, most of the instructors for the undergraduate courses only have Master’s degrees, while for the graduate courses, the instructors all have PhDs.  Many of the instructors at both levels have a lot of autonomy in how they work their online class even though many of them have many sections which means many student papers to grade.  This can present problems from the student perspective as workload, assignment format, expectations, etc. will likely vary greatly from one professor to the next. 

Lastly, taking an online course is not easy. It requires a lot of self-discipline. The semesters are still 16 weeks, but the courses are 8 weeks. In each course we go through the entire book. There are assignments due every week. For example, in my course on human learning, there was an essay and multiple choice exams every week, as well as a group presentation of learning theories. Every week there was three things due by 11:59 pm on Sunday night. Points were taken off if you missed this deadline, unless you had permission from the instructor. In week seven, there was a 10 page research paper that was also due to be written in APA format.

The multiple choice tests were extremely challenging. Whereas most multiple choice questions in undergraduate courses were mostly verbatim recall, these exams were applied multiple choice questions. You had to know the concepts. You could not get by just by memorizing key terms. Each question was a hypothetical situation with four choices to choose from. Choose the best answer. Bottom line is that online courses are equally difficult to the residential counterparts.

Send article as PDF to Create PDF

A Second Masters Degree

A colleague asked me what my plans are for the very near future asking “what’s next?”  You have an MBA. So what’s next? When I was pursuing the MBA, it was more for advancing myself in business and for more intellectual reasons. After being my dad’s full time caregiver for the past two years, that degree has become irrelevant in my life. I would rather use a degree that would allow me to help people get off of addiction to alcohol.  
Education
I fully intend to get another masters degree, one that will allow me to become a licensed clinical psychologist focusing on substance abuse. I have considered a number of schools that offer online degree programs, but I have eliminated all those for profit schools, and those that are not regionally accredited. I strongly recommend Liberty University for their Master of Arts in Professional Counseling program.  
Criteria
1.) The program, whatever it is must be inexpensive.  Thus I am paying for the entire program and all associated costs directly out of pocket.
2.) The program must allow me to defer my current student loans.  This is what makes paying for the program possible.
3.) I prefer longer typical semester class lengths, 16 weeks or so for the regular semester.  I can easily adapt to the shorter and more intense 8 week sub terms many universities offer in their online degree programs.
4.) The program must be regionally accredited.
5.) I would like the program to have some utility in the non-academic world; the management information systems emphasis for example would likely be very useful.  
6.) I would like to be able to take a break at some point during the year and still be able to maintain at least half time student status.  
7.) The school must not be a for profit institution.
lulogo1So far that’s about it and LU looks promising, but there are still some things to be discovered, semester length, etc.  Nova Southeastern University was another leading candidate.  However, because my undergraduate degree was from a for profit institution, NSU was going to require the GMAT. LU does not require the GMAT, GRE or any other of these meaningless tests.  Either way I’m looking forward to it.  
Send article as PDF to PDF Download