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Sunday, September 7, 2008

You Really Can Get a College Degree Without Attending College

By Henry Gregory

There are many reasons a person fails to get a college degree. However, lack of that piece of paper doesn't necessarily have to derail your career.

One of the biggest reasons that a person might fail to get a college education after high school is simply that person's age. While many young students make the decision in high school that they want to be an Orthodontist or a Nurse, the majority don't really think about their careers until they have had a chance to operate in the work force for a few years and decide what they want their life path to take.

Others know what they want to do with their lives, but the reality of their financial situations make getting that degree difficult. These folks generally start school, but are forced to drop out at some point with the silent promise to self that the diploma will be earned at some indeterminate time in the future.

Many more people go into a field like many of the technology fields that have more specialized skills training and certification programs. These programs are the only thing needed to be competent to begin their careers. The lack of a degree doesn't really affect them until they get to the point in their careers where Human Resources places an arbitrary diploma requirement on any further advancement.

Whichever of these situations someone finds themselves in, all too often the responsibilities of the real world intrude. The responsibilities of a family, or just getting caught on the merry-go-round of trying to keep ahead of bills usually cause people to give up the dream of ever getting far enough ahead to go back and finish school. This invariably puts a ceiling on not only their earnings, but on the kind of life they will be able to give the people they love.

Fortunately for those caught in this dilemma, colleges are aware that someone who is in the work force is growing and becoming more skilled through their experiences. There are programs available where people can get either a protracted program where they get partial credit or even total credit for their chosen area of study. In other words, you can shave years off the time needed to complete that degree program and get a stalled career restarted.

The benefits of getting your degree in this manner are saving years of your life, and the fact that participating in these programs tends to cost a tiny fraction of pursuing the same course of study in the traditional manner.

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