Online Degrees Now Widely Accepted by Consumers and Employers

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Thu Jan 8, 2009 1:25pm EST

High quality and cost-saving make online education increasingly attractive

SALT LAKE CITY, Jan. 8 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Consumer acceptance of
online education is now at an all-time high. Convenience, flexibility, and
eliminating costly commutes to a campus have broadened the appeal of getting
an online degree for busy adults. Over the past five years enrollments in
online courses and online degrees have been growing over ten times faster than
traditional higher education.

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What about employer acceptance? Are employers reluctant or hiring graduates of
online schools?

It depends, basically, on the individual job seeker. Does the candidate
possess the requisite skills and knowledge to perform the job at a high level?
 Did he or she get the real education needed, not just a piece of paper?

These days online graduates are no longer at a disadvantage, if they ever
were. According to George Lorenzo, publisher of Educational Pathways, hiring
managers "have come to realize that the vast majority of online higher
education graduates are adult lifelong learners who are self-disciplined,
reliable and have a knack for applying practical, experience-based knowledge
in the workplace."

Lorenzo is the author of "Online Education Makes the Grade: Employer
Acceptance Now Common," a white paper sponsored by non-profit, award-winning
Western Governors University (WGU). According to the special report, "Most
employers will look at prospective employees who have online degrees on a
case-by-case basis and will not make a radical yes or no judgment simply
because of an education delivery mode."

Richard Garrett, senior research analyst for Eduventures, an education
research and consulting firm headquartered in Boston, notes, "If you ask
employers about their sense of the quality of online education -- is it of
equal quality to traditional education? -- the response you typically get is a
growing adherence to it being of equal quality."

"Quality will continue to be a major concern," according to Patrick Partridge,
Vice President of WGU. "And rightly so. Students should be even more concerned
about quality than employers. They need to realize that the skills and
knowledge they learn are more important than the diploma itself if they are
going to excel in their careers."

WGU is on a non-profit online university founded by 19 U.S. governors to
expand access to quality online education for working adults. In 2008 WGU was
awarded the national "Best Practices in Distance Learning" award from the U.S.
Distance Learning Association. TIME Magazine recently featured WGU as "the
best relatively cheap university you've never heard of." (Nov. 2008)

WGU's special strength is its rigorous "competency-based" model that focuses
on demonstrating knowledge rather than seat time. The approach relies upon
challenging assessments, including actual industry certifications at no extra
cost, to measure a student's academic progress. Students who have prior
expertise, study hard, and put in extra time can accelerate their programs and
save dramatically on tuition. That's because WGU's modest tuition is charged
at a flat rate every six month term, not per credit.

Part of WGU's mission is to keep online education affordable for working
adults. "The value was phenomenal," said IT graduate Sean Onion. "I would have
paid thousands more at other schools." WGU students are also eligible for
federal financial aid.

Today there's a good chance employees at a large corporation are themselves
online students, maybe even the hiring manager. In a 2007 research study by
the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) over 70% of the respondent
companies offered tuition reimbursement for online degrees from regionally
accredited colleges. According to Gerry Crispin, who was a member of the SHRM
Technology & HR Management Special Expertise Panel, "There are many more adult
learners out there who are getting their degrees online, and many of them are
now hiring managers." In fact, most college transcripts never indicate if the
degree was earned online or not.

The world has changed and online education no longer creates worries. Just the
opposite. When Jack Welch, former CEO of General Electric, was asked the
question, "Would you hire someone with an online business degree?" his answer
was revealing. "To count out a candidate based on an online degree may be
shortsighted," he responded. "People working all day and studying online all
night have the kind of grrrr most companies could use."

The complete white paper provides more analyses, data, and case studies about
employer acceptance of online degrees. For more information about WGU's online
degrees, visit the website at www.wgu.edu. 




SOURCE  Western Governors University

Amber Podlucky of Western Governors University, +1-801-290-3658
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