The main thing we're taught in college is accreditation. I can hang out a shingle and say I'm accredited and that you can take my classes online and work and work and work but in the end when you go apply for jobs I am not accredited and you'd have wasted all that time and money for nothing.
So, if you have some college already and only want a BA in social work I imagine you could go through a local university or college that offers that degree.
If you already have a BA or BS and want an MSW I suggest you actually go to grad school. It's not that many hours and it is more prestigious than getting a degree online.
If you want to work in social services for your state or an organization as an Executive Director then you are going to have to have a solid degree that is unquestionable.
When I was on the Board of Big Brothers/Big Sisters we interviewed a lot of prospective applicants for our ED. We really didn't even look at anyone who didn't go "to" the school to take the classes because that person showed their education wasn't very important.
There are many ways for an adult to go to college, one friend rented an on-campus apartment and drove home to hubby and kids on the weekends and breaks. Some moved to a campus in another state and only came home on breaks. One lady rented an apartment and choose all Tuesday/Thursday classes. She drove to campus on Monday evening, went to classes on Tuesday, studied and did class work on Wednesday, then went to classes on Thursday, if she got more work assigned that had to be done on campus she'd head to the library after classes. When that work was done she'd either spend the night in her apartment or head home for the rest of the week. She's the one we hired too.
She showed that both her family and her education was important and she had nearly straight A's since she took time out of her week to completely focus on her education. She could compartmentalize school and work because she had that day set aside for nothing other than school work. So everything was done and she didn't take school home with her.
She was an awesome director and when I moved away from that town she was still the ED.
People who are hiring for positions look at things like this. Why didn't you go to real college. Why didn't you go to a school and go through a classroom situation, do you have issues with people? Crowds? Social anxiety issues? Don't like to drive back and forth? They want to know the reasons a person didn't choose a traditional method of getting their education.
Millions of people go to school full time and have full time families.
Many of the people doing the hiring are older and wouldn't have ever thought about taking classes online from some....business. They expect full time college students that graduate with good grades. Otherwise they wonder why that person didn't go that route.
They might not like non-traditional. SO no, I'd never do an online degree for anything like this.
For things like computer science or drafting or even a secretarial position the person looking for an employee can look at your skills and can even test you for those things. But when it comes to a social science it's different.
We had head hunters come to OSU and give talks about how their hiring process works. The ones from either Armstrong or Mercury Marine told us they look at anyone coming in, if they have ANY degree that is outside of CEAT, College of Engineering, Architecture, and Technology they see if that person has an exact 4.0. If they even have a 3.9 they toss them in the trash. Gone without even reading them.
They said that anyone coming out of CEAT that can make even a solid 3.25 is a higher GPA that some social scientist. If a "social scientist" can't make a perfect 4.0 in their easy classes they they aren't very smart and they only hire smart people. They felt that the degree qualifications for a student in their programs worked around the clock 24 hours per day, day after day, they'd crash for a couple of hours under their work area desk then drink a 6 pack of Mountain Dew or pop a few energy drinks back and stay up for another few days to meet deadlines. They "worked" and "sacrificed" for their degrees and any other college degree that wasn't accompanied by a solid 4.0 was not a dedicated student or very smart.
This is almost exactly what they said. They were being honest and trying to get us to understand that most head hunters or people in human resources that do the hiring think of social sciences and all other degrees except math or science based degrees to be soft degrees and not worth anything.
To work in social services you will be competing with people who went to college for 4 years to earn those degrees and probably went on to grad school for masters or PhD degrees. So if you just have an online degree they will likely just discount it and you might not even get an interview.
Sorry, I'm sure that isn't what you want to hear. I'd never go for a social science degree online. I'd go full out to a university for the real deal and the prestige that comes from that school.