Hello! I'm really hoping the community here can help me as thinking too much about this stresses me out and I am highly prone to irrational optimism followed by sadness when it comes to college planning. Hopefully what follows isn't too rambly!
Here's my story: Dropped out of college without earning any credits twice due to depression when I was younger. Now financially secure, and more importantly emotionally secure, and looking to get my degree with help from my job's tuition reimbursement ($5000 a year for a business related major). For the past two years, I have been attending the University of Michigan-Flint online on a very part time basis and have so far earned 16 credits. UM-Flint offers very little in terms of online options that aren't degree completion... I started there primarily because I had originally attended the University of Michigan and took comfort in the block M... and as I've gotten back into the swing of things, I have begun to strongly desire a degree for both personal fulfillment (I've got a bit of an inferiority complex and living in a college town definitely doesn't help!) and, more importantly, career security. For that latter reason, I would like to get a jump start on finishing things: my job is paying for this and I might not get another 10 years to putz around just for the love of learning before being thrown into the water of needing a new job without the credential. I'd like to complete my degree ASAP.
My search has taken me from the University of Wisconsin's Flex option (I could do the Associate's Degree to knock some stuff out) to Indiana University East (I'd need some prereqs before I could transfer) to, most recently, Central Michigan University's Global Campus. While I haven't entirely written off the prospect of the first two (especially IU as it is cheaper and takes more CLEPs), I've lately become enamored with the idea of CLEPing or using CMU's Alternative Credit Project partners to knock out ~half the degree and then proceeding to finish things up over the next few years. However, I am unsure whether or not this would be worth pursuing. In particular, I am concerned with figuring out whether CLEPs or ACE credit would be the better path. I could realistically earn about 11 CLEPs that CMU accept, giving me a total of almost 50 credits and leaving me open to any degree program. The ACE credits through SL seem more expensive than just taking the CLEPs and would limit my degree choice, but I could earn 60 credits that way. I'm generally a self starter and a great test taker, so maybe the CLEP is better?
Somewhat complicating things is this list of CLEPs accepted by CMU, which says that some of them "must be taken before first day of classes as a freshman", which is confusing to me as someone who would ideally be bringing 16 credits with me. I imagine only CMU would know, but it is still complicating my decision making here. They also award up to 60 credits for a prior learning portfolio, which I know nothing about. Does anyone have any experience with that or enough information on it to advise me on what it means?
So yeah, sorry for the disorganized thoughts! Any and all advice will be greatly appreciated! Thanks!
Here's my story: Dropped out of college without earning any credits twice due to depression when I was younger. Now financially secure, and more importantly emotionally secure, and looking to get my degree with help from my job's tuition reimbursement ($5000 a year for a business related major). For the past two years, I have been attending the University of Michigan-Flint online on a very part time basis and have so far earned 16 credits. UM-Flint offers very little in terms of online options that aren't degree completion... I started there primarily because I had originally attended the University of Michigan and took comfort in the block M... and as I've gotten back into the swing of things, I have begun to strongly desire a degree for both personal fulfillment (I've got a bit of an inferiority complex and living in a college town definitely doesn't help!) and, more importantly, career security. For that latter reason, I would like to get a jump start on finishing things: my job is paying for this and I might not get another 10 years to putz around just for the love of learning before being thrown into the water of needing a new job without the credential. I'd like to complete my degree ASAP.
My search has taken me from the University of Wisconsin's Flex option (I could do the Associate's Degree to knock some stuff out) to Indiana University East (I'd need some prereqs before I could transfer) to, most recently, Central Michigan University's Global Campus. While I haven't entirely written off the prospect of the first two (especially IU as it is cheaper and takes more CLEPs), I've lately become enamored with the idea of CLEPing or using CMU's Alternative Credit Project partners to knock out ~half the degree and then proceeding to finish things up over the next few years. However, I am unsure whether or not this would be worth pursuing. In particular, I am concerned with figuring out whether CLEPs or ACE credit would be the better path. I could realistically earn about 11 CLEPs that CMU accept, giving me a total of almost 50 credits and leaving me open to any degree program. The ACE credits through SL seem more expensive than just taking the CLEPs and would limit my degree choice, but I could earn 60 credits that way. I'm generally a self starter and a great test taker, so maybe the CLEP is better?
Somewhat complicating things is this list of CLEPs accepted by CMU, which says that some of them "must be taken before first day of classes as a freshman", which is confusing to me as someone who would ideally be bringing 16 credits with me. I imagine only CMU would know, but it is still complicating my decision making here. They also award up to 60 credits for a prior learning portfolio, which I know nothing about. Does anyone have any experience with that or enough information on it to advise me on what it means?
So yeah, sorry for the disorganized thoughts! Any and all advice will be greatly appreciated! Thanks!