Special Education and Teaching at Capital University

Columbus, OH · Private nonprofit · Bachelor's Degree
33 /100
DegreeOutlook Score (Base Case)
34
Optimistic
33
Base Case
38
Pessimistic
Earnings $42,709/yr (-3% vs median)
AI Risk High (44% exposed)
Job Market Large (34,900 openings/yr)
ROI 3.0x earnings multiple
Ranked #147 of 170 Special Education and Teaching programs

How AI Changes the Outlook

Three scenarios based on how aggressively AI disrupts the career paths available to Special Education and Teaching graduates.

Optimistic
No Disruption
Base Case
Gradual AI
Pessimistic
Aggressive AI
10-Year Earnings $504K $503K $482K
Earnings Multiple 3.0x 3.0x 2.9x
Probability of Field Employment 81% 73% 58%
DegreeOutlook Score 34 33 38

10-Year Earnings Projection

*Year 1 uses actual reported earnings. Scenarios diverge as AI impact compounds over time.

4-Year Tuition (Sticker)
$167,152
4-Year Net Price (After Aid)
$94,340
44% less than sticker · See by income
Median Debt at Graduation
$27,000
7.6 months of Year 1 earnings
Reported Earnings (5 Year)
$49,486
16% growth from Year 1

About Capital University

A 73% acceptance rate means Capital University is accessible to most applicants, with a smaller student body of 1,709 in Columbus, OH. After financial aid, the average student pays $94,340 over four years — 44% below sticker price.

See all programs and financial aid at Capital University →

Top Career Paths

Education teachers, postsecondary $72,090/yr
Special education teachers, secondary school $69,590/yr
Special education teachers, all other $67,430/yr
View all 6 career paths with salary ranges and AI risk →

Compare & Explore

Special Education and Teaching at Other Schools

Other Majors at Capital University

Consider the Trade Route?

Trade programs often mean less time in school, lower student debt, and hands-on career paths that tend to be more resilient to AI disruption.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the DegreeOutlook Score for Special Education and Teaching at Capital University?
A score of 33/100 indicates below-average financial outcomes for Special Education and Teaching. Earnings, ROI, or AI risk factors are pulling the score down.
Will AI replace Special Education and Teaching careers?
With 44% of typical job tasks exposed to AI, this is one of the higher-risk fields. Our pessimistic scenario projects $482,059 in decade earnings vs $504,202 in the optimistic case — a meaningful gap.
Scores use College Scorecard earnings, BLS employment projections, and AI task-exposure research. See full methodology →