When Leslie Arriaza first heard about the University of Virginia’s program, she nearly dismissed it, seeing UVA as a four-year school with little room for adult students like herself. However, as Arriaza read more about the program, she realized it fit her circumstances perfectly.
Offered through 鶹ƽ School of Continuing and Professional Studies, the BIS program is designed for adult students who work full-time, have some college credits and need a flexible program to complete their undergraduate degree.
Courses are held online in the evenings, with some options for in-person courses if students are interested in that. The entire program is designed to be flexible, allowing students to complete their degree quickly if they want, or to take courses at night as they can and finish over several years. On average, students complete the program within three to four years.
Students enter the program with 45 to 60 transferable college credits, and must complete 120 total credits to earn a bachelor’s degree. They can choose from concentrations in art and society, business, cybersecurity analysis, early childhood, health care management, history and politics, information technology, liberal arts, psychology and writing, or design their own. Students also complete a capstone project, a two-semester independent research project on a topic of their choice, with mentorship from a faculty member.
Arriaza, who currently works for an accounting firm in Herndon, completed the BIS program in 2019, finishing a college degree that she started years earlier. Now, she is nearly done with a certificate in human resources through SCPS as she continues to build her career.
Here’s what she had to say about her experience.
Q. Why did you decide to enroll in the BIS program?
A. I started college in 2000 and it did not go very well. I was not ready for school and did not really know how to be a student. I did not have much of a framework for what college meant.
When college did not work out, I worked in retail for a long time. I became a manager, working long hours, and going to school was not really an option at that time. However, I was laid off during the recession in 2008, and that really opened my eyes as to where I was going, career-wise. I felt like I needed more structure and stability.
I got a job at an accounting company, and that is when I started seriously considering going back to school. I had plans to go back to George Mason University, where I had originally started, but there were a lot of hoops to jump through and I would have had to retake so many classes. I almost gave up, but a friend sent me information about the BIS program at UVA and I started looking into it.
At first I dismissed it, because I thought there was no way I could get into UVA, but it was geared perfectly toward me and nontraditional students like me. I had about two weeks to apply, by the time I found out about it, so I put everything together really quickly. I’m so glad that I did.
Q. You graduated with a concentration in liberal arts, having also taken many business courses. How has what you learned helped you?
A. I did not expect what I got out of the program. I was very focused on just getting a degree and getting that line on my résumé, so I did not have to explain why I did not finish college. I got so much more out of it than I ever expected.