Densaugeo wrote:
Ultimately, both learning something and getting the paperwork to prove it will be more work than just learning it. You may need to take fewer classes, if you are having trouble keeping up with them.
Actually, I'm thinking of dropping this, continuing to work at the temporary staffing agency, paying off my current debt of $20,000, saving and investing as much excess income as possible, studying on my own to get certification such as A+, plumbing, wiring, etc. Study academic subjects on the side and CLEP out of everything possible should I ever decide to return to a "higher education" facility to be an agent for funneling money into their accounts.
Consider this, for the A+ certification it costs $168 per test and there are two tests, meaning $336 for the total costs of the tests. The textbooks available for it currently costs up to $80 on Amazon for one of the more expensive ones. That's a total of $336 + $80 = $416 *total*. At Rasmussen College, they divide the A+ textbook into two classes each worth 3 credit hours, meaning 6 credit hours total. It is about $500 per credit hour, so that is $500 per credit hour times 6 credit hours equaling $3,000 for the chance to rush through an A+ certification textbook and not even take the exams, whereas the price of studying autodidactically plus price of exams is $416, so which is a better financial investment?