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Bear's guide is timely, not only because today there is a greater need for distance learning, but also because progressive education theories in the lower schools has produced less educated freshmen students and a resulting lower standard in requirements for a "conventional" degree. The quality of distance learning at the better remote schools has come up, while the quality of learning at traditional universities has gone down.
Bottom line, distance learning at a good on-line or correspondence school can be just as good as or better than that at a traditional campus, especially those whose standards have been intentionally lowered.
There is no magic in classroom hours. Hard study motivation by and of the student is what is important. The piece of paper that says "DEGREE" at the top is both useless and meaningless if it doesn't represent hard academic study under qualified supervision and guidance. Properly done this can be accomplished through distance learning. It doesn't matter if Bear has founded several schools and is pushing them if the academic requirements are high. I earned my advanced degrees from accredited traditional state universities so I have no ax to grind. I would value a degree from an academically tough distance learning school higher than a degree from a snobbish Ivy League campus school whose academic requirements have been lowered to accommodate a less qualified and less academically motivated student body.
Universities have always been about money, regardless of the hoop-la made about lofty educational goals. Just look at the sports scholarship culture and the money ball games brings into the university if you doubt this. A drop in student body size means teacher lay-offs and reduced staff salaries unless tuition is raised, which can exacerbate matters.
Bear's guide can be of great assistance in evaluating schools offering distance learning. I left off the fifth star because he wasn't completely open about his personal involvement in several schools he promotes.