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Online Bachelor Degrees – The Steps To Obtaining One

Online Bachelor Degrees The Steps To Obtaining One

Before the age of the Internet, getting a college degree without attending a brick-and-mortar university or college was possible only with a few major universities. You had to pass their stringent entry requirements and then sit back waiting for the postman. If a lesson was lost in the mail you had another long wait for the replacement.

Today, however, you can choose your subject of interest, pay the admission fees and semester tuition and start studying immediately. Many big name universities now offer online bachelor degrees in a variety of fields. Even the venerable London University, the pioneer in distance learning, now offers a great number of online bachelor degrees.

The first step in getting an online bachelor degree is to find an institution that offers the course of study you are interested in. There are institutions that specialize in business studies while others concentrate on technology. You should then check out the fee structure. Some online colleges ask for an entire semester's tuition to be paid in advance while others offer a monthly installment payment plan. The latter is always slightly higher due to the fact that you are in fact receiving a loan from the institution.

Once you have found the school of your dreams with a payment plan that suits your finances, you should perform what is probably the most important task before you start studying: verify that the institution and the courses it offers are both accredited by a reputable agency.

There are two ways that you can verify if your college or institution is accredited: Regional Accreditation and accreditation by the Distance Education Training Council or DETC. There are six Regional Accreditors, each one covering a certain number of states. The online bachelor degrees granted by institutions with regional accreditation are accepted by both employers and other colleges. The degrees granted by institutions with only the DETC accreditation do not enjoy the same level of open acceptance as that of the regionally accredited colleges.

Getting an online bachelor degree involves a certain degree of compromise on your part but the benefit that would accrue is worth the effort. You should first be certain that this is something that you really want and then you should do your homework and make sure that your college is fully accredited. If all goes well you should be able to get your degree in less time than someone studying at a brick-and-mortar school.




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