I laud your efforts and do not want to minimize what you accomplished, just wonder if the current proliferation of these types of programs has diluted the the quality. From my view their purpose seems to be focused on profit rather than education (lots of advertising).. they also now seem quite expensive considering the minimal overhead and associated costs.
The whole college thing and associated cost has kinda sorta lost their way.. places like New England Institute of Technology can cost about 15 K a year while you can get something comparable degree at Community College of RI for no cost for a RI resident.. New England Institute of Tech is very aggressive to get their full payment even if a student does not complete their coursework. Some of what is going on in these for profit schools verges on predatory lending.. I could go on and on, but do not want to minimize what #11 has accomplished as I do not want to minimize your accomplishments either.
I got my masters when I was 35 (BU when BU was affordable), a career goal, it opened a wealth of opportunity for me at a tremendous financial sacrifice and impacted my young family.. but it gave me overwhelming confidence to accomplish more than I thought possible..