Iristheangel wrote: » I finish my degree in a year and a half and I had 2 jobs. I am working on my masters degree now and I should have that done within a year
pcgizzmo wrote: » So, you went in with 0 credits and did it in a year and a half. That's impressive. How much of a commitment was it on your time as far as studying etc? What did your week look like? Thanks...
Raisin wrote: » My mentor told me last week that WGU is currently in the process of raising their cut off scores on many of the in house assessments. I suspect this is in response to the number of people who are flying through their general ed classes. I'm not sure what effect this will have on future students but it is something to consider and should be motivation for current students to finish up any of those classes before the scores are raised.
paulgswanson wrote: » This is not an official answer, just my perception so take it with a grain of salt as it were. I think the AS is assumed. Im pretty sure you can apply for the AS once you pass your BS so you will likely get them at the same time. Kinda like when you take the test to be your CCENT and then you pass the second exam and become CCNA. Since CCNA implies you have the CCENT. I could be completely wrong here but that how I understand it
kgb wrote: » There's a lot of students that have no desire to go faster, get done quicker.
yoshiiaki wrote: » That's me. It seems everyone here is in such a rush to get the degree. Get it ASAP and then move on. I like to take my time and thoroughly study everything they give me. I applaud those capable or willing to complete in such a short time, but I don't envy them. WGU gives a lot of resources, although not always the best. They outline exactly what they want and if all you want to do is pass the course, shouldn't take you more than a couple days to pass each WGU course. Could really do most of them in a single day if you spent all day studying, and scheduled for the next day. Their courses are pretty much a joke, at least from what I've taken so far. Certs again, at least for these lower levels you could do real fast, maybe a month at the most if you had 0 experience prior. My intention isn't to pass but for long term retention. . Sure i'm not going to remember 100% of what i learned through my time at WGU but I always aim high. Any other college I could have gone too would have required atleast a 70% to pass, none of this 50-60% that WGU expects... and if i was there I would expect no less than a 90% so i don't see why I should expect any less of myself at WGU. Maybe it's because i'm not as intelligent as some of those that complete it in 1 term (I'm pretty certain many people here are smarter than me) but i'll take my time and I won't worry about it. Even if I take a few extra years than everyone else, I'd still be on pace with any traditional college and my financial burden will still be far inferior to what it could have been. In terms of OP, how long merely depends on how much time you put in. I choose to take 15-20 units at a casual pace (12 would just be unbearably slow) adding a course as a pass throughout the semester to insure i don't over commit. I'm on pace to graduate spring of 2015, with one course in that semester, so i'll probably just do a little extra to graduate fall of 2014. Most people on this forum will start and finish before me. That's their choice and they are putting in more effort than I am.
pcgizzmo wrote: » ... is that I'm 43 hence the question regarding time...
paul78 wrote: » I'm 44 and I had a few chats with a very informative counselor at WGU a few months ago. Unfortunately, WGU doesn't accept transfers of credits more than 15 years old so between family and work, I decided to put off enrolling. I may get my degree some day but I have been saying that for the last 20 years. I hope you do it - I'm rooting for you... I wish you good karma.
pcgizzmo wrote: » I can appreciate your point of view. What I didn't say in my origional post is that I'm 43 hence the question regarding time. If I were 23 or even 33 I don't think I would be so focused on how long it will take.
pcgizzmo wrote: » What I didn't say in my origional post is that I'm 43 hence the question regarding time. If I were 23 or even 33 I don't think I would be so focused on how long it will take.
kgb wrote: » But, I don't pretend and think that I wouldn't have learned more by going to actual classes in a classroom that enabled me to networking with students/teachers, being able to ask questions for the next 4-8years that it would've taken me to finish going part time at night.
I made a post about why I think going slow for the sake of "retaining" is just a waste of money. My opinion, in a nutshell. You are paying someone else so you can "retain" the information. Learning doesn't stop after you graduate. You can argue that I don't remember everything, well, it's not an argument, because obviously I don't. The important stuff, I'm still learning about. The difference is it's not costing me any money to do it.