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admin on July 22nd 2009 in University, career, college, distance learning, technical school
admin on July 22nd 2009 in University, career, college, distance learning, technical school
Distance Learning brings a university education to more students, in more places, using the latest technology.
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admin on July 13th 2009 in career, distance learning
I was planning to go to Armstrong Atlantic State University and take some core classes to get the feel of college. But someone told me, if i knew that i was going to major in radiology then i could go technical school and start right way at what i want to do. So can i get some ideas and your input on the best road to go? Well either schools affect my salary in the long run? Which one is the quicker way to get my “dream job”?
I don’t know how it works at that particular school, but it does not matter what school you go to as long as it is accredited. I actually recommend hospital programs, which give you a certificate – better training, less money. A degree doesn’t make you any more money as a tech; it’s only necessary if you want to go into management or teaching. You can always go back to get your degree after you are a working tech. That’s what I did.
Technical schools are definitely quicker, but pay-wise you might want a four year degree. I guess which route I would take would depend on my life situation… If I need the money and want to get into the workforce immediately, I would go to technical college. Four year degrees give you a good all-around knowledge and position you higher on the pay scale, but they are much more expensive.
Go to a university.
If you’re planning on going to armstrong, Im pretty sure you already know that they have a radiology program too…
If you go to a technical school, lets say you want to advance your degree after that, which means going to a university. You’d have to take the majority of your classes all over again because university only takes a select few classes transfered from a technical college. Which means you can spend two years at technical school plus an additional four at university, or just spend four at university. Again, only assuming you wanna advance your degree and make more money. In the long haul, I think university would be better…
References :
Student @ AASU
admin on July 10th 2009 in University, career, college, distance learning, technical school