Four-Year Colleges w/IT Related Associates Degree Program

Discussion in 'General Distance Learning Discussions' started by lawrenceq, Oct 8, 2009.

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  1. lawrenceq

    lawrenceq Member

    Does anybody know of any Div I four-year colleges that offer IT, CS, MIS or BIS associate degrees.

    So far my list has:
    Liberty (MIS)
    Troy (AGS w/applied compuer science)
    Penn State (IT)
     
  2. FLA Expatriate

    FLA Expatriate New Member

  3. Ted Heiks

    Ted Heiks Moderator and Distinguished Senior Member

    Darn! That one's like in my back yard! How could I have forgotten? (Bonks himself on the head)!
    Oh! But here is one that's like way out in my back forty acres!
    Kentucky Virtual University www.kyvu.org

    Or, for those who don't mind a mere two-year school for an alma mater and would like to get a few laughs from when they're wearing their college sweatshirts:
    Hazard Community and Technical College in none other than ........................................................................
    Hazard, Kentucky!
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Oct 12, 2009
  4. FLA Expatriate

    FLA Expatriate New Member

    Having previously lived in Bell and Harlan counties (KY), I can say there usually arises some confusion about Hazard, which is in Perry County, KY. The "Dukes of Hazzard" TV show was supposedly located in the fictional "Hazzard County", GA.
     
  5. lawrenceq

    lawrenceq Member

  6. Ted Heiks

    Ted Heiks Moderator and Distinguished Senior Member

    The fictional Hazzard County was in Kentucky, wasn't it?
     
  7. FLA Expatriate

    FLA Expatriate New Member

    Ted, I believe during one of the show's first few episodes, the narrator, Waylon Jennings, explicitly states "Georgia". Hazard, KY stuck with most viewers because no other place in the USA possesses such a name.

    Geographically speaking, differences between ATL, Covington, and Conyers, GA -- where the series was filmed -- and Perry County, KY are striking. As my father formerly stated when comparing Hazard with the fictional locale, "there ain't a flat spot nowhere around".
     

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