https://www.techtitute.com/us/medicine/professional-master-degree/master-artificial-intelligence-clinical-research https://www.techtitute.com/us/docentes/arturo-peralta-martin-palomino https://www.linkedin.com/in/arturoperalta/
My likelihood of doing clinical research = 0. Not for me. I notice the professor has what is likely an ENEB- sourced degree or two among his credentials. Particularly, his MBA from Universidad Isabel 1. And fortunately, his doctorates don't appear to be titulos propios.
What the heck is this? Official online school of the NBA*? "world's largest online university" with 14,000 programs? How have we never talked about this place?! What's the accreditation system in Mexico look like, can anyone provide any insight? *in Latin America: https://pr.nba.com/tech-technological-university-nba-partnership-latin-america/
We've had this place before. Thread cited below. I'm wary. This "techtitute" appears to be a Spanish-domiciled offshoot of Tech Technological School in Mexico. (1)There's a thread here. https://www.degreeinfo.com/index.php?threads/tech-technological-university.61572/#post-576844 (2) If you want to check the "accreditation" status of ANY Mexican University -- you can look it up. link below. https://sirvoes.sep.gob.mx/sirvoes/ You can also look course by course, to see if it has Ministry approval. Look for an RVOE number (reconocido de validez) A Ministry-recognized degree program will always have one. If it doesn't - that means the school has not sought Ministry approval for it -- that can be legal, but without mainstream standing. Somewhat like a "propio" in Spanish schools - and Techtitute says it's in Spain. Note: Tech Technological University (the parent) linked to its place on the Mexican Government site as https://www.sep.gob.mx/es/sep1/Federales I just received a 404. Looks like it's changed - or.... > Most people say "if it's too good to be true - it likely isn't. With 14000 programs etc etc I think THIS one is "too BIG to be true." So -- I'm not convinced.
I object to the use of the term "propio" or "titulo propio" for any degree not awarded by a Spanish School. Yes, schools in Mexico and some other Spanish-speaking countries are able to award degrees for courses that do not have Ministry Approval, but the customary name "propio," I believe, refers strictly to Spain. I think "Mexican Propio" is something home-grown there, that can be smoked.
It certainly does - and that diminishes hope of a favourable Foreign Credential Evaluation in US or Canada. At least from a legitimate source.