It's all about marketing degrees these days. Some universities are more amenable to accepting those extension course credits than others. And some employers are less inclined to accept them.
In the past the problem with extension courses has always been validating that the enrolled student was actually doing the work. Anyone could be writing the paper for him or doing his assignments. Compare to how I ran my in class seminars. Student shows up he/she gets 50% for just filling a seat. But 50% won't pass. If the student says anything pertinent he can get another 15%. If the student tries to derail, he loses points. He demonstrates he's done the reading with thoughtful debate, grade goes up correspondingly. And I occasionally gave unannounced pop quizzes on readings which always included an extra credit question or two. Quiz was the grade for that seminar. If you missed class, you essentially missed a chance for extra credit. It was pretty much impossible for someone else to be doing the student's assignments.
Zoom and the internet has obviously changed things dramatically re extension courses. I suspect extension courses may become more accepted by universities and employers. And for good reason. However during Trump's time at university (only slightly before my time at university), extension courses were generally viewed with suspicion.
youre demonstrating your ignorance of the CLEP program.... and your ignorance of the job market...
CLEP involved proctored exams administered in controlled testing centers where the student provides state or federal identification prior to being allowed to sit for the exam..
its literally easier to cheat on an exam administered in a university classroom by the professor than it is to cheat on a CLEP exam unless the professor is requiring each student to positively identify themselves at the beginning of every exam (something I have never experienced in 10 years of cumulative university studies)..
Zoom has zero to do with test integrity since no university I am aware of uses it for testing or course administration.. universities have their own platforms for course delivery online.. most are based on a couple of university specific commercial software packages... Most brick and mortar universities these days dont even have the professors administer their own exams when the courses are delivered in the classroom... students go to controlled testing centers on the campus and take proctored exams... most entirely online degrees dont involve testing.. they instead involve papers and other written assignments and projects that are submitted to the professor(s)... and when they do require a test they are administered through varous online controlled protoring software packages..
At this point most employers dont care if a degree was obtained entirely online or entirely on campus or if they got their degree through a hybrid model... ABA now accepts online learning for juris doctor degrees.. the top tier MBA accrediting organizations like AACSB and others accept online learning... every regional accrediting institution now accepts online learning ... none of them distinguish between students degrees obtained in the classroom, online, or hybird..
I'd challenge you to find me 10x students that have graduated from a brick and mortar university in the last 5 years that hasnt taken at least a handful of online courses as part of their degree program, even if they live on campus as a full time student... online is the model that practically every brick and mortar school in the world adopted after COVID... The Ivy Leagues now offer online classes as part of their degree programs.. Harvard offers a masters in business through its extension school that is presented entirely online.. law students at Harvard take courses online as part of their JD program, etc.. Ive got a daughter that just graduated from Lousiana State University in December.. she lived in Baton Rouge for 4 years and was a "traditional" brick and mortar student.. she took several classes online.. I have another daughter that is a junior at the University of Arkansas.. she lives on campus.. she too has taken online courses as part of her degree program...
If someone presents a bachelors of science from the University of Michigan, University of Montana, Harvard, or Yale, its almost guaranteed that at least a few, if not many, or potentially ALL of their course work was done OUTSIDE of a classroom these days... and the employer isnt going to know which classes were delivered online or in person because the transcripts do not differentiate nor do the diplomas..
your own claimed alma mater offers no less than 4 doctoral degrees that are compoletely online and dozens of graduate degrees, dozens of bachelors degree, and countless certificate programs, etc..
catalog.umt.edu