University
of Phoenix - Military Program
At University of Phoenix Online for military personnel,
you can earn your degree via the Internet whenever and
wherever you want -- at the base, on the ship -- wherever
you have Internet access.
Request
information
University of Phoenix Online is an
approved provider of SOC, or Servicemenbers Opportunity
Colleges. SOC colleges and universities are dedicated
to helping servicemembers and their families get college
degrees. Military students can take courses in their
off-duty hours at or near military installations in
the United States, overseas, and on Navy ships.
Why Participate in a SOC Program?
Recognizing the problems faced by military students
whose jobs require frequent moves, SOC member schools
make it easier to obtain college degrees rather than
just accumulate course credit by:
• Limiting the amount of course work students
must take at a single college to no more than 25% of
degree requirements
• Designing transfer practices to minimize loss
of credit and avoid duplication of course work
• Awarding credit for military experience
• Awarding credit for tests such as CLEP, ECE,
and DSST national testing programs
Active-duty students may use tuition assistance to fund
their programs; reserves and veterans may use the Montgomery
G.I.Bill.
Servicemembers and their adult family members in the
Army, Navy, and Marine Corps benefit by participating
in degree programs at SOCAD, SOCNAV, SOCMAR, or SOCCOAST
schools. Colleges and universities (including University
of Phoenix Online) that participate in the network degree
programs for the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps agree
to:
• Guarantee to accept each other's courses in
transfer within curriculum areas such as management,
computer studies, interdisciplinary studies, and others
• Award credit for military service schools and
occupational experience
• Act as "home colleges" and issue Student
Agreements that serve as as degree plans to enrolled
students
When a student moves on to a new duty station, the
Student Agreement acts as a contract-for-degree, so
that courses, tests, and military experience that are
part of the degree plan are transferred back to the
home college. When all degree requirements set out in
the degree plan are met, the home college awards the
associate or bachelor's degree.
Students who are unable to attend courses in regular
classrooms may take courses by distance learning, which
includes correspondence, computer, or video that can
be taken anywhere. Other colleges don't require that
students take any courses from their schools —
they use a learning assessment approach in which they
evaluate for credit previous learning experiences, manage
the degree program, and award the degree when the requirements
are met. Tuition assistance may be used to pay for courses
in these programs.
|