ATrain wrote:jbock13 wrote:I agree with SJ. Just so he will cringe when he reads that.
Anyone who has taken LUO classes knows they are always easier than on campus ones. There's also an added benefit to finishing things whenever you want to. I was usually done with all five classes in two days, which left me five days just to goof around.
Now, I'm not saying they aren't beneficial to people who have jobs and can't afford to move to college. They were beneficial. But let's not get carried away. One discussion board is about Jesus, and we just recite some line we heard in sunday school.
I agree LUO classes are easier than on campus, but Southern New Hampshire has perhaps the easiest way to a degree I've ever seen. My old roomie is in the Navy, and reading some of his papers that he submitted that got A's...eesh.
All these blanket statements about online classes naturally being easier than online are ridiculous. I have taken both online and on-campus classes at LU and on-campus classes at other schools.
Some online classes were easier, but several of them were actually as difficult or more difficult than classes on campus. It just depends. My son is a full-time student at LU. Some of his classes are easy, some aren't. I have had on-campus classes that were easy, but I don't leap to the assumption that the entire process is easier than online. The experiences are different.
One thing I think some people fail to realize, or refuse to acknowledge, is that a lot of online students aren't just looking for an easy way to a diploma. For one thing, it's not easy. Some actually value the fact that their LU degree is a from a real brick-and-mortar school and not by mail order. I think any tendency to diminish someone with a degree acquired online as beneath those who trod campus for four years is wrongheaded. I earned my degree by taking nearly half of my classes online, and, son attending LU aside, I feel as much a part of the school as anyone.