I have a friend who is a proud graduate of DeVry, and of the US Navy's educational system. I don't know that he could, or couldn't, design a generator control's circuit board from scratch, but if you need to get a generator suite up and running, and someone else has already screwed it up beyond recognition, he's your guy. Actually, I'd give more credit to the Navy than to DeVry.
I have another friend who signed up at ITT Tech, intending to become a mechanical engineer in a matter of months. He was back at work as a mechanical designer in three weeks. ...Poorer by $8000.
My impression of commercial schools is that they tend to allow you to believe things that they never actually say outright (which is also true of many successful managers).
... and that they actually offer and present material that would allow you to learn any given skill to a high degree of competence, but they don't do out of their way to help you assimilate the material, or to motivate you to do so, beyond collecting a lot of money for presenting the material. ... which is also true of name brand schools.
My DeVry graduate friend had several things working in his favor; he's wicked smart, and the Navy, with its strong incentive program, gave him good study habits, and leadership skills that probably would have taken him far even without DeVry.
My ITT-T non-grad friend's prior work as a machinist and designer didn't give him better study habits than he had in high school, and ITT's sales staff did nothing to correct whatever delusions he might have had. They started off with basic AutoCAD training, which he didn't need, and that may have caused him to blow off his other courses until they accelerated a bit and left him in the dust. I'm sure it was a bad experience and he'll be derisive of ITT-T forever.
I don't know any online graduates. ... well, I think I do know one guy who put a diploma on his wall from some outfit I never heard of, so I'm guessing it's an online school because anyone who's ever met the guy in person thinks he's a stupid a...
Let's say I'm cautious about online schools, and I'd tend to give their graduates even less respect than I might give to commercial school graduates, even though MIT put all their course material online. ... which you would do well to browse, and to 'try out' as if you were being tested on it, to help you estimate how well you might do and how crazy the course material might make you.
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA