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Customizing Adult Education

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There are countless colleges and countless programs out there and if they're doing anything right in the way of promotion they probably all sound ideal and exactly right for you. Browsing college websites and catalogs is a good way to become conversant in the academic marketplace but to get real purchase on a school a more strategic approach is in order.

Know What you Want

Let your educational needs dictate your choice of program. This will eliminate a slew of schools. Some of them may be excellent schools with excellent programs, but you are not after a generically excellent education. You are after an education that suits you.

Depending on your prior education and profession, you may be already set on a degree and ready to survey schools. Even so, be sure that your chosen degree resonates in your field, in your industry, in your company. Be sure that you can put your degree to real use. Will this degree qualify you for a broader range of jobs? Will this degree improve your earning or advancement potential? Will this degree help you transfer your skills to another field? Would a different degree or a certification program better serve you?

If you are unsure what direction to take or unsure what education is necessary to break into a field, take the time to self-assess and feel out your options. Work backwards. What career, what job, what opportunities do you want to have in the years to come? What credentials are necessary for entry-level application and for subsequent advancement? Is more than one level of education necessary and what undergraduate degree is best suited to graduate acceptance? What programs substantively prepare students for vocational or professional opportunity?

Know What You Can Handle

Adults juggling work and families typically need to schedule work in the off-hours. Determine how much time you can realistically devote to school. Figure out exactly how many classes or credit hours you can handle per semester. Eliminate schools that lack the flexibility you need. Many schools have night and weekend classes but they vary in frequency and class times. Look into scheduling specifics. Look into schools that have reputations for catering to adult learners. Online schools afford students great flexibility but vary in course style, from independent student-driven courses to synchronous class-oriented courses. Look into the exact nature of online courses. Assess how you would manage your time given online scheduling.

After cursory research on a large number of schools, narrow down your options. Engage in thorough and exhaustive research on a select number of schools. Your research should ultimately lead you to five or six serious options, eight schools at the most. Applying to more than that may suggest a fuzzy sense of what you want out of an education.

If you find yourself having trouble narrowing your options down, take a step back and reassess your motives and your goals. Separate what might be selling and seducing you into a college from what is substantially right for you in a college. Research more: it just may that be you haven't yet broken through the surface understanding of schools.

  • Examine program prerequisites, program outlines, course descriptions, and faculty credentials. Compare and contrast programs at different schools.
  • Investigate beyond the web. Contact schools with questions; talk to admissions or department representatives. Remember recruiters are paid to recruit.
  • Find out how online courses are structured within a program; find out the technical requirements for the school, including any program- or course-specific accessories. Ask after the extent of general tech support provided to students.
  • Look at program retention rates; how many students graduate is a far better indicator than how many students are enrolled. Seek out current students and graduates; try and gather a sense of schools, programs, courses--beyond what school representatives provide.
  • Utilize your network of colleagues and friends for help in gathering experiential information, as well as for a sense of how a school or program resonates in your field or industry.

Check The Credentials

Make sure that your short list of schools are all accredited and legitimate. If there is any doubt, investigate: read online, make calls, follow the money trail. Cross-reference schools with diploma mill and scam reports. An unknown name is not necessarily a red flag. There are many small institutions that lack visibility but are nevertheless quality providers of education.

Sources:
  • The Adult Student's Guide to Survival & Success, Sixth Edition, Al Siebert, PhD & Mary Karr, MS, Practical Psychology Press, 2008
  • "When Applying, Think Backward" by Andy Rosen
  • "He's Got Some Great Advice For You: Relax" by David L. Marcus
  • Finding the Right College For You, Kaplan, Newsweek, Winter 2010
  • "Time Management Tips" academictips.org 1/10 (http://www.academictips.org/acad/timemanagement.html)
  • Online Education for Dummies, Kevin Johnson & Susan Manning, EdD, Wiley Publishing, Inc, 2010
  • "Guide to Online Education" eLearners.com (http://www.elearners.com/guide-to-online-education/index.asp, http://www.elearners.com/resources/elearning-faq3.asp)
  • Graduate Savvy: Navigating the World of Online Higher Education, Jeff Green, Ph.D., Glocal Press, 2008

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Disclosure: Not all programs are accelerated, available in all locations, or in both online and on-campus formats. The transferability of credits is subject to each school's transfer credit policy. Financial aid including grants, scholarships and loans may be available to those who qualify. Program lengths and outcomes vary according to each institution's specific curriculum and employment opportunities are not guaranteed. CompareTopSchools is a consumer information site that offers free ratings and recommendations of colleges and universities. We are an advertising-supported service and receive compensation from many of the schools that appear on our site. Compensation may impact which schools we rate and recommend and where those schools appear. CompareTopSchools takes into consideration several proprietary rules to determine how and where schools appear on our website. All opinions expressed on this site are our own, including, without limitation, our designation of a particular institution as being a "top" school.