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Student Testimonial

Victor R Kruger, Jr. Perhaps the main reason I made the decision to attend Yorktown University is that I wanted a classical education. I wanted an institution that not only recognized the value of western civilization, but also actively sought to maintain the truths and principles that have underpinned our society.

There is room for new ideas as we move forward, but wholesale replacement of the very ideals that have guided us to this point in history is decidedly foolish. I think this is especially true when these principles are not known or it is not understood why they exist … we ignore history at our own peril.

There is truth and the pursuit of that truth has been what has driven the greatest minds and civilizations. We can argue over whether we ultimately know a truth, but the moral relativism that seems to pervade our society and a number of our educational institutions is the antithesis of truth.

I have been actively attending colleges since 1981 and I have a B.S. in Computer Science from Penn State and a M.S. in Computer Science from Florida Atlantic University. In addition to these, I have completed individual courses at a number of institutions (University of North Florida, Durham Technical Community College), as well as numerous training and professional conferences by leading companies (e.g. IBM, Gartner, etc). I have listed these not to brag, but to show that I have a broad basis for comparison to my experience at YU.

First, let me state that although there have been some rough spots procedurally as YU has started out, the quality of the course content has met my high expectations. I have found the teachers to be well versed and the material on target.

The pleasant surprise I have had is in the amount of interaction and quality feedback I have received from the professors. They have shown not only an interest in commenting on the current discussion thread, but also have spent the time traversing alternate threads. For instance, the course I am currently involved in required a two-page essay on a particular subject. The critique and additional points for thought that came back was three pages long!

The instructor had arguably put more effort into the assignment than I had. This is indeed rare. This has made my experience at YU equal to or better than some of the better courses I have attended elsewhere.

Victor R Kruger, Jr.