(BPT) - Key takeaways:
- Working adults increasingly need education that can fit around jobs, caregiving and evolving skills demands as AI reshapes jobs, skills and hiring.
- Undergraduate enrollment among adults 30 and older is increasing and traditional college models were not built for adults balancing full-time work, caregiving and changing career demands.
- An online university should have recognized institutional accreditation, career-relevant curriculum, transparent tuition information, clear transfer credit policies and targeted student support designed for working adult learners.
- University of Phoenix is an accredited, transfer-friendly university offering online degree programs designed for working adults and built for real life.
If you're a working adult in 2026, going back to school is no longer a niche decision. It is increasingly part of how people stay competitive in a labor market being reshaped by AI, automation and changing skill demands. The World Economic Forum reports that technological change remains one of the biggest forces reshaping jobs through 2030, while higher education itself is confronting the post-2025 enrollment cliff as the number of traditional-age students begins to decline.
For adults balancing jobs, family responsibilities and financial pressure, the question is not only whether education matters. It is whether a degree program will fit their life without overwhelming it, whether the learning connects to skills that matter in today's workplace and whether the school is designed to help them finish.
Experts at University of Phoenix share what working adults should look for when evaluating an online university, including how to assess legitimacy, flexibility, career relevance and support.

How to tell if an online university is legitimate
A legitimate online university should have recognized institutional accreditation. It might also offer visible student support, transparent tuition, transfer-credit policies, and evidence that its programs are aligned to real occupations and skills.
University of Phoenix, for example, has been continuously accredited by the Higher Learning Commission, hlcommission.org, since 1978.
Adult learners should also look beyond accreditation and ask how the school is designed for completion. Does it offer schedules that work for adults with jobs and families? Does it help students transfer eligible prior credit? Does it connect learning to career-relevant skills? And does it provide support that continues beyond enrollment?
Useful questions to ask include:
- How is the program structured for working adults?
- What kinds of academic, advising and career support are available?
- How does the curriculum connect to job-relevant skills?
- Can my prior eligible credits or experience reduce time and cost?
- Are there alumni using the degree in fields similar to mine?

Working adults are looking for education that fits the realities of their lives and builds skills they can use in a rapidly changing economy.

What if I'm too old to go back to school?
Many adults worry their age, life circumstances or family obligations could keep them from succeeding in a degree program. In reality, adult learners are already a major part of higher education. Let's look at University of Phoenix again: The average age of students is 38, with 75% of them working while attending school and 52% with dependents.
That is why fit matters so much. A school built for working adults should reduce friction, not add to it. University of Phoenix emphasizes a model built for working adults, including one five- to six-week course at a time, multiple opportunities to start throughout the year and support designed for adults balancing work, family and school.
How do employers see online degrees?
Employer attitudes toward online education have shifted significantly in recent years. In a 2026 University of Phoenix survey conducted by The Harris Poll, almost all hiring leaders today (98%) view online education credentials as more credible than they did 10 years ago, seeing value in continuing education for employees and new hires.
The survey was conducted online within the United States by The Harris Poll on behalf of University of Phoenix from Jan. 14-30, 2026, among 502 U.S. adults ages 21 and older who are employed full-time, have a job level of manager/supervisor or higher, work in the human resources or learning and development function, are employed at a company with at least 1,000 employees, and operate in the manufacturing, financial services, information technology, or health care industry.
The research also found that 78% of hiring leaders said workers with these credentials stand out because they bring new and emerging skill sets.
According to the survey, employers report workplace benefits: As a result of employees having online education credentials, hiring leaders report increased productivity (63%), employees picking up skills more quickly to respond to changes in the job market (62%), and more qualified candidates (60%). That is why students should look for online universities that align curriculum to occupations, validate learning through authentic assessments and help learners translate what they know into employer-facing signals.
At University of Phoenix, program curriculum maps are informed by labor-market data, faculty expertise, external standards such as accreditation and Industry Advisory Council feedback. That skills-first design supports digital badging, helping learners turn completed coursework into shareable, verified signals of skill development while they are still progressing through a degree.

What features working adults should look for in an online degree program
Today's working adults need higher education that does more than put classes online. They need learning designed around evolving workplace skills, supported by clear student services and recognition of prior learning, and responsive to how AI is changing both jobs and education.
University of Phoenix offers degree programs aligned to more than 300 occupations, reflecting the institution's broader, skills-mapped, career-focused model. To help learners show progress before graduation, University of Phoenix issues digital badges that translate assessed learning into verified skill signals that can be added to their digital profiles as demonstrated skills, even before graduation. Since 2021, the University has awarded over one million digital badges, reflecting its investment in skills-aligned, employer-informed learning.
Adult learners returning to higher education often bring valuable prior learning with them. University of Phoenix demonstrates the scale of an institutional model designed to help students preserve eligible academic credit and avoid unnecessary repetition, with more than 7 million transfer credits applied toward degree requirements over the past eight years and up to 87 transfer credits accepted for many bachelor's programs.
AI readiness is also becoming part of the value equation. University of Phoenix established a framework of academic AI pillars that integrates AI tools and applications into its learning model, including a newly established Center for AI Resources. The University embeds AI literacy and skill-building into its curriculum, expanding AI-enabled learning supports and strengthening policies and workflows that guide responsible, effective use across the academic experience.
Schools serving working adults should also provide career support services. University of Phoenix provides Career Services for Life® resources for active students and graduates beginning on day one, through degree completion and beyond, offering lifetime access to personalized career coaching, webinars, resume guidance, interview preparation and other resources.
"Working adults are looking for education that fits the realities of their lives and builds skills they can use in a rapidly changing economy," said University of Phoenix Provost and Chief Academic Officer John Woods, Ph.D. "The strongest online degree options combine recognized accreditation, career relevant skill development, student support and a learning model designed to help adults keep moving toward their goals."
Learn more about University of Phoenix degree programs, transfer-credit opportunities and student support resources at Phoenix.edu.