Distance Degree Programs offer New Opportunities for Chronically Ill Students
Tuesday, May 13th, 2008Distance Degree Programs offer New Opportunities for Chronically Ill Students
Have you struggled with a debilitating illness or disease for years? Did you think that frequently hospitalizations placed your dreams of an undergraduate degree hopelessly out of reach? Through distance learning degree programs, you can achieve your dreams of getting a professional degree from a fully accredited college or university!
Often, students with chronic illnesses are stigmatized because people do not really understand their health condition. Uninformed people may believe that the disease is contagious, that they may become infected simply by sharing a classroom with someone who is ill. This kind of ignorance has caused people with AIDS, Multiple Sclerosis (MS), or even spina bifida to be shunned and feared.
Frequently, however, these students are bright young people who desire to obtain a social work degree, psychology degree, or other accredited degree. Many desire to help other students who have health problems that are the same as, or similar to, their own. Having been through the struggles with pain, fear, and ignorance, they desire to impart their survival skills to future students.
A distance education degree offers excellent opportunities for these students. They do not have to leave the comfort of their own homes to walk into a hostile classroom and take an exam. If they are hospitalized or not feeling well, the flexibility provided by on line degree programs allows them to catch up on coursework when they feel better. Furthermore, students aren’t visibly reminded of their “differences.” They are more able to interact with peers and professors naturally and without inhibitions, fears of cruel comments, or uncivil behavior.
Chronically ill students can choose from a wide variety of distance degree programs that meet their interests. These learning opportunities are ideally suited to students with unique physical and personal challenges. They have the chance to achieve the educational goals they have long desired - when they are well enough to achieve them.







