![]() ![]() In addition, there is a faculty assigned to students in the course room section of the comp exams and provides answers to questions about the guidelines of the comp exams if they are unclear to the student. The student is then required to redo the comp exam in another session with three different readers interpreting the content. The initial two readers grade the paper low due to the changes and the third grades it high according to the revisions the student made under the recommendations of that faculty member. Again, the readers provide inconsistent feedback. If all three readers do not pass students on the comp exam, students are required to have the exam revised in 10 days. One reader will give a very high grade in all sections, one will give similar feedback and recommendations and the third will report that none of the required criteria is met. There are three readers that review and grad the comp exam base upon their own interpretation of the content. The same inconsistency in feedback and grading occurs. By the third residency, another faculty member goes on to report that the second recommendation was incorrect and the student should have kept the work as it was initially submitted in the first residency. The next residency, a different faculty member says it is incorrect and needs to be rewritten to a different recommendation. For example, when submitting the DRP, in one residency students are given compliments on their work and told by one faculty member that the content meets all the required criteria. The student feedback during the development of the dissertation and during the comp exam process is extremely inconsistent between facility. I read reviews like the one I wrote and thought to myself those people were just unlucky or whatever, but now I am one of those people and I swear if I had more funds I would sue this university. ![]() Obviously I did not know all of this at first - they have great marketing and programs - flexible, study from all over the world blablabla. ![]() they are unwilling to help accomodate tricky situations. NO ONE will provide you with help, guidance, or advice.Ĥ. the MASTERS OF ADDICTION program is NOT recognized.ģ. Capella does not have a SEVIS ID because they are not registered as an "international university"Ģ. There is false advertisment on the website saying they accomodate international students - when it's time to do your practicum or internship you receive 0 help.ġ. IF YOU ARE AN INTERNATIONAL STUDENT (as in NOT a US CITIZEN)- AVOID AT ALL COSTS. and had to pay an insane amount of money. Whether or not there a scam, I don't know - all I know is that I am not able to graduate from this uni. I am so so disappointed - 2 years of my time and over USD$ 20 K. ![]() I never ever write these types of reviews but I wholeheartedly do NOT recommend this university. I am going to stick it out, but if this helps anyone who is on the fence, I would not go to Capella. They take advantage of you b/c they know that you are desperate to finish-up a previous degree or in the case of many H1 Visa students, require the completion of an American degree to work in the US. If you are in a different situation, find another school. Overall, I would say that in my situation, I am desperate to finish quickly. I am on my 5th course with 14 more to go. The 5th and final one took the instructor almost 3 days to evaluate. 1-4 were evaluated within 12 hours of my submission. I had a situation where I had finished assessments 1-5 within a week. The last point, it takes some instructors a long time to evaluate your assessments, wasting your money. I have experienced tutors skipping my confirmed session! I like many people who are considering Capella, I did not finish my original degree due to a life-threatening illness and this seemed like a way to get it done quickly, DESPERATE! The second issue is in order to have a tutoring session, you have to make an appointment, as you may already imagine, there is 1 tutor per course so more difficult courses have a longer wait time. When I inquired about it with my advisor, she said that the enrollment counsellor made a mistake and took off 1 course, 19. So if you have 70 transferable credits, you really only have about 35. Capella has some formula they use to calculate credits, which is about half. I was originally quoted 12 courses to graduate, as I had transfer credits, but when I received my academic plan, after signing up, the number was 20. ![]()
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