07-21-2013, 01:22 PM
This isn't really very surprising. I was looking at the failure rates of some open universities around the world and common first year courses such as Calc I, Intro Biology, Intro to Computer Programming, etc. all had 35-50%+ failure rates. San Jose State charging only $150 per course only made the problem worse. Reducing barriers to entry like admissions and cost are laudable, but it comes with consequences such as people not taking courses seriously, people coming into the course completely unprepared and of course, "pyjama people". Pretty much every open university out there has accepted this as the reality they have to work in to achieve their mission.
Even at a regular university, the failure rate is generally very high in the first year. Sometimes, people need a taste of failure to motivate them to change their ways.
Even at a regular university, the failure rate is generally very high in the first year. Sometimes, people need a taste of failure to motivate them to change their ways.
CPA (WA), CFA Level III Candidate
Currently pursuing: ALM, Data Science - Harvard University, Cambridge, MA (12/48, on hold for CFA/life commitments)
MBA, Finance/Accounting - Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, 2015
BSBA, General Management - Thomas Edison State College, Trenton, NJ, 2012
Currently pursuing: ALM, Data Science - Harvard University, Cambridge, MA (12/48, on hold for CFA/life commitments)
MBA, Finance/Accounting - Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, 2015
BSBA, General Management - Thomas Edison State College, Trenton, NJ, 2012