@Jayden,Ask many in the forum have said, it all depends on the college. Some are really good, others are just bogus. But in my opinion, in a discipline such as IT or software engineering, the online courses may actually offer better training and learning than the local counterparts. While the method of study is different, the quality of courses and the examinations taken tend to be similar if not the same as the ones taken by full timers. Good courses will definitely take a longer time than the full time equivalent, and you will need more hardwork and discipline.Depending on the country you wish to study in, there will always be a 'CHE' equivalent, start there and try and find if the college is legit or just another Kenya Aviation.The University of London's may colleges offer some of the best distance learning and online course, and I would recommend you look at their offerings as well if you have not made your choice and cast it in stone.I myself did a distance course at the London School of Economics and Political Science, and I haven't had any issues with employers, though the organizations I have worked for have tended to be international and thus do not display the bias towards local colleges that I assume natively Kenyan companies would. I may say at some point the foreign degree may have given me an edge over candidates with local papers.But thats me and everyone's circumstances differ. The bottom line be good at what you do and be able to show and talk it, and also a long work experience with demonstrable milestones doesn't hurt.On Mon, May 11, 2015 at 5:10 PM, Oliver Ndegwa via skunkworks <skunkworks@lists.my.co.ke> wrote:You can also choose a college or university which has affiliation to a Kenyan college. E.g university of Sunderland has Intel college in Kenya. This way your course work is supervised by a local institutions.
My thoughts.
OliverOn May 11, 2015 3:44 PM, "awatila--- via skunkworks" <skunkworks@lists.my.co.ke> wrote:_______________________________________________Would advise you to do two things
· Check the ranking of the degree on the UK Academic Quality Assurance Agency website
· Check with Commission for Higher Education – Once CHE approves a degree all Kenyan employers are bound to accept them.
If you have not made a final decision consider UNISA from SA which Kenyans are more familiar with
Regards,
Alex
From: Jayden Brayden via skunkworks [mailto:skunkworks@lists.my.co.ke]
Sent: Monday, May 11, 2015 6:49 AM
To: Skunkworks forum
Subject: [Skunkworks] How do employers view online degrees?
I am preparing to do an online Msc in Software Engineering at the University of Liverpool. I have chosen to do it online since I move a lot between countries, so getting a Masters degree from a brick-and-mortar campus is out of the question.
So my question is:
- Do employers view degrees earned online differently than degrees earned on campus?
- Is there a Skunk here that has experience learning online and willing to share his/her experience regarding online degrees?
Thanks.
Jay
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