I went to college for a few weeks right after high school before dropping out, and all of the classes were in-person. Now I'm going again (and not dropping out), on my 2nd semester and I've only had 1 class so far that was in-person. If it matters, I'm doing InfoSec and programming classes.
To me, what they're doing feels wrong. They're outsourcing all the classes to some product made by some company. Every class is done in some website. The course instructors don't do any teaching.
All of these platforms have problems. They don't work very well, and they're wrong about so many things. There's never any chance to get the actual correct answer to the rest of the students. In a real class, you could just raise your hand and discuss with the teacher and class, but this is so isolating.
I've had a lot of issues doing my coursework from Linux. The "simulator" for my "intro to computers" (which should actually be named Intro to MS Office) literally had a built-in sensor to reject work done by people using Linux. I got around it with help from the instructor, who still seemed to have the hacker spirit, but it shouldn't be like that in the first place. We never could get past the detector for LibreOffice, but dammit we tried! That same simulator (SIMnet) marked any task as incorrect if you try to select text with CTRL+a. Apparently the "correct" way to use a computer is the least efficient way possible.
Is there a pedagogical reason I'm not seeing here? Or is it as I assume, and it's just another example of enshittification or whatever?
I got my accredited BSCS, and did learn some news things along the way (even after 15 years programming professionally), even the "bullshit" classes like project management taught me some ideas that keep popping up in the workplace.
Even though every course was just an app, I spoke with a mentor every week who kept me motivated. I also never had trouble getting in touch with instructors the few times I needed.
If you're getting this treatment from an expensive university, you're paying for the name. Is their name worth paying for? Don't pay brick-and-mortar prices for online-only treatment, unless it's a top 10 school whose name will be widely recognized.