As an educational professional I certainly would thumb past a online degree holder application in favour of a full time graduate , lamenting under my breath that those online degree mill holders are sadly lacking in the human communication department.
Nil points for observation TC as there was no intention to hide my defensive stance. Actually, I thought it was quite obvious.
Although I never sought advice from you, It makes me even more grateful that you have not only managed to offload some of your wisdom on to me but you've managed to load it with a sarcastic, mocking and arrogant tone. I'm honored you think I was worth the trouble..
Instead of posting 10.2 posts on here every single day of your god given life. Maybe consider going outside and meeting people. It will do you the world of good.
Good point, HH. Some might say an online masters lacks peer interaction, but that could be fulfilled by interacting with other teachers.
My cousin got her special education degree online while she was working at summer camps and what not with special ed children. It seemed to be a nice balance. It probably as served more effective than a traditional brick-and-morder degree.
“You have your way. I have my way. As for the right way, the correct way, and the only way, it does not exist.” -Friedrich Nietzsche
I was thinking of that place in Middle Earth.
No, not really. If I accidentally type "your" instead of "you're" or mispell a word, that's a bad habit, and we need Nazis like you to correct us, otherwise the English language itself will molder like a rotting book, pages putrefied by everlasting erratum. Thy kingdomcome, thy will be done. Thanks for proofreading. Good luck with your masters.
Last edited by typ123; 15th June 2012 at 00:58.
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