ZapperZ said:
So how do you know that they did 100% of their program online? I read these links, and I can't find any such information. Unless I'm wrong, Open University has several campuses in the UK, am I right?
Zz.
Mr Diggle from Warwick lists his modules on his public Linkedin profile and none of them are residential, so there is your unicorn (not in the US, but still). But you may be right about the others. See below.
There is one campus in Milton Keynes, which is used by academic staff and research students. There are several so called "regional centres", but those serve administrative purposes. During an undergraduate degree one could have done some on-site study in the form of
- on-site tutorials (optional) and
- residential schools (now phased out)
There are very few tutorials, which are basically pen&paper problem solving sessions: during my entire degree I could have attended at most 13 on-site tutorials, each 2 hours long. Most modules switched to online tutorials and the remaining ones are likely to do the same. The tutorials are optional and attendance is neither tracked nor expected. I do not think they materially change the classification of the degree as fully online.
The residential schools used to be five-day intensive lab sessions worth 5 ECTS / 10 CATS points hosted at local universities. Almost all of them have been phased out in recent years. There are currently none in physics/maths. But ten years ago a BSc in Physical Science required one to attend a total of three residential schools (giving 8% of total credit). From what I have gleaned, the maximum number of residential schools one could have put into a physics degree in the past was 2 pear year, in which case the degree would have been 85% online
ZapperZ said:
And just because someone has a degree from Open University, does that automatically imply a degree program that was done entirely online?
Yes, apart from the residential schools and sporadic tutorials. At least any degree after 2000, I have no idea how it worked earlier. I would be surprised if the OU ever had undergraduate classes / lectures in the traditional sense and they certainly have not had any in the last two decades.