Single Mom Back in College - Seeking Advice on Transfer Schools

Updated on July 25, 2012
S.S. asks from Lake in the Hills, IL
5 answers

Hello -
I'm trying to see if there are any other moms out there that have been able to college by taking mostly if not all classes online. I am a single mother and I work full time during the week making it nearly impossible to actually get to a class, and I don't have a steady sitter to watch my son at night. I am looking to pursue a degree in psychology and eventually get my masters in art therapy. I currently live in Lake in the Hills,IL. I have attended McHenry County College and have 4 remaining classes left to finish my associates degree, the majority of which has been online. I spoke with a counselor at MCC who suggested University of Pheonix, however, I was skeptical because they seem to be a "degree mill" type school and I want to make sure I will have the accreditation and proper education needed to pursue my career. I don't want to "buy" a degree. I was having a horrible time trying to find schools offering any sort of psychology degree in any 4 year schools nearby that offer a variety of classes online. Any suggestions???

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K.E.

answers from Chicago on

If you only have four courses remaining, your best option is to find equivalents online of the courses you have left at McHenry CC and transfer them back to your "home" school. I have did this with my Master's in Education. I attended a four-year university and when we moved a few hours away, I only had four classes left. If I were to transfer everything to another school, I would have lost too many hours. It was the better option to just seek the classes elsewhere, check with my home school to ensure they would transfer in, and then take the classes. That is what I did and I was able to finish my degree and graduate from my original school. I have several years of college administration experience and have also worked with advising several students in your situation. My suggestion would be to look online (more to come below on selecting reputable/accredited schools) and find a similar course description for each of your remaining classes at McHenry. Every school should have their course catalog online with the course descriptions. Take each description back to McHenry to the Registrar's or Registration office and get approval. As long as the hours and description are equivalent, they should transfer. You may have them from different schools. I took one from Univ. of Phoenix and a couple of others from Olivet Nazarene Univ. in Bourbonnais (a correspondence course where I watched the videos from home and completed the work and sent in). I had a positive experience with Univ. of Phoenix. Please note that most schools will have a limit on how many hours you can transfer in from another school, but in my experience, four hours should be no problem.

As far as online classes/colleges, just be sure you select an accredited college. Every accredited school is governed by one of six accrediting agencies in the U.S. This link details those: http://www.back2college.com/library/accreditfaq.htm

Any school should have no problem providing you their accreditation information. It should actually be on their website. If you don't choose an accredited school, your classes will not likely transfer.

From a student and college instructor perspective,I have enjoyed both taking and teaching online courses. There previously was a stigma (and perhaps there still is) about online classes not being "quality." I disagree. I currently teach at a local college as well as online for a university. As a student, the courses I have taken were just as demanding (if not more due to me having to make sure to allow enough time to be online) and rigorous. As an instructor, I expect the same behavior and results from my "on-ground" students. Yes, you may have students in your class, who occasionally post something in the discussion board that is not written properly or curses, but as an instructor at my online college, we have procedures in place to stop those actions immediately and remove the student if necessary. I have had it happen twice in five years of teaching online. But I have had to remove two students in my on-ground class as well in the past five years for inappropriate behavior as well. In online classes, you typically have a weekly discussion assignment where you correspond quite a bit with others in the class. Some people miss the face-to-face interaction, but sometimes the convenience of online is necessary due to work or other obligations.

As long as the degree is from an accredited school it should be viewed as the same level as a degree from an on-ground school. With this day and age, many of the online requirements require clinicals on-site, hands-on experiences through arranging of your own, etc. You still sit through lectures; they are just on video or are read. They just aren't delivered in person. My online students still have the same amount of chapter reading, paper writing, etc. as do my on-ground students. Most online colleges are "for profit." Many are still accredited, but do shop around for costs when comparing. Your federal financial aid (through FAFSA) can still be used for an online accredited school. Many principals or asst. principals complete their advanced degrees for those positions online. In today's society,

If you transfer four online classes back to McHenry, though, your degree will still come from McHenry.

Also, this site has actual student reviews of their experiences with online schools. You will see that for most schools, there are both good and bad experiences. I have found that goes for both online and traditional colleges. http://www.guidetoonlineschools.com/online-reviews

Best of luck as you finish your degree. It will give you a great sense of accomplishment to finish and hopefully provide you with the career you want.

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J.P.

answers from Chicago on

Don't go with University of Phoenix online...from personal experience, it was horrible. I just got my associates thru University of Massachusetts Lowell and I'm in my last year for my bachelors. They are cheaper and they are a public school so I think they are taken more seriously. UoP was bad...students would swear at other students and teachers online and plagiarize others work. UML doesn't allow it and my experience with their online program has been pleasant. Pm me if you want more info.

Updated

Don't go with University of Phoenix online...from personal experience, it was horrible. I just got my associates thru University of Massachusetts Lowell and I'm in my last year for my bachelors. They are cheaper and they are a public school so I think they are taken more seriously. UoP was bad...students would swear at other students and teachers online and plagiarize others work. UML doesn't allow it and my experience with their online program has been pleasant. Pm me if you want more info.

A.R.

answers from Chicago on

As a single-parent and full-time college student, I would suggest finishing up at the community college and then transferring to a 4 year school for your Bachelors with your child.

My father works in HR and advised me that online schools like University of Pheonix are a joke.

Keep in mind that there are SOOOO many schools that have programs that cater to single parents and they can help with daycare and housing and support groups. It's hard, trust me...but it is worth it!

I will be completing my final semester this fall at Northern Illinois University...My son is 3 :) - If I can do it, I'm sure you could too!
Best of luck!!!

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G.B.

answers from Oklahoma City on

I can pass on my opinion as to what an employer is looking for when they go to hire someone.

IF I were the director of an agency needing a psychologist.

If I had 2 people coming to me applying for the job I would look at their education. If one was an online degree and the other was an actual go to class and sit in a lecture I would hire the one with the college experiences.

I think that people who do online degrees have a good basic understanding of the topic and can retain the knowledge enough to pass a test to get a grade but I do not think they sat in groups and worked on case studies, worked on diagnosing a person who is presenting with certain characteristics for a treatment plan, etc...there is very little actual interaction with the field in an online program.

I also will tell you that if you consider going to a full university with a doctoral program in the field you are interested in that you will have a network of professors that will invite you to work on special projects. They will know your face, your opinions, your work ethics, etc...they will be the people who write your letters of recommend for your better paying jobs.

If you are a single mother who is not making a ton of money, that does get financial aid of any sort, you will get tons more money at a full university. I would estimate enough to live on without working full time.

If you rent your home you could live on campus in married/family housing at a greatly reduced rate and have immed. access to school any hour of the day.

You can go to study groups and network with other people that will be out there finding jobs and recommending their friends to their future employers.

It would also free up your time to be with your little one. You can apply for reduced child care expenses through the state, since your income would be lower, financial aid doesn't usually count as income per say, then you could be getting child care at no cost.

So, in a nutshell.

I would apply to every full university in the area and get financial aid paperwork in the office so I could mail it off January the 1st. That way you will get first consideration.

Then you get excepted into the program you want, if you decide you want to you move to campus, can quit work, and take your time, get an education, spend lots more time with little one, and have your network ready so when you apply for grad school you are the professors best student and you get excepted into the program you desire.

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R.M.

answers from San Francisco on

Check out WGU - Western Governors University.

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