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So, I got some advice for my liberal arts degree at TESC, but now that I have passed a clep I wanting to take more and not just straighterline. I was just going to get a bachelor's but I might as well get the associates on the way lol
Anyways I need a degree plan with cleps and everything please help!
Aleks Beginning Algebra,intermediate algebra,college algebra,trigonometry,and working on statistics at the moment.
FEMA: 19 down so far!
Clep A and I lit.54
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Have you checked out the degree forum wiki
TESC Degree Plans - Degree Forum Wiki That has several lesson plans. Also this paper can help you pick test that fit different requirements
http://degreeplanners.com/media/TESC..._By_Course.pdf
Linda
Start by doing what is necessary: then do the possible; and suddenly you are doing the impossible St Francis of Assisi
Now a retired substitute Teacher in NY, & SC
AA Liberal Studies TESC '08
BA in Natural Science/Mathematics TESC Sept '10
AAS Environmental safety and Security Technology TESC Dec '12
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Well, I am going to be finishing up my TESC degree in the next year or so. I am not an expert but I can share what I did. You send TESC all your transcripts from all the colleges you've attended so far. Send them your joint services transcript if you were in the military. Send them any training you have received. I don't know if you are in nuclear power or not, but a NRC license counts for a lot. About 60 credits. So, they (TESC) will do an evaluation of your credit and send you a document showing what classes you lack to attain your degree. I took that paper and just systematically planned out my own path. You bounce the things you have left versus what CLEPS and DANTES tests exist. My plan was to maximize standardized testing and minimize actual attendance at a school for time and financial reasons. You start ordering the quick study guides for the tests you want. Start knocking them out. Pretty soon you'll be to the point where your standardized test phase is over and you have to attend a school to get the last few classes. I had to do this for two classes that required a LAB and one class for which no standardized test exists.
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