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(12-16-2017, 07:02 PM)Zetineb Wrote: (12-16-2017, 06:31 PM)sanantone Wrote: You can take individual courses at APUS and transfer them. If you decide to complete your entire degree at APUS, there are two things to keep in mind.
1. They do not offer a biology degree. They offer a natural science degree with a concentration in biology.
2. APUS only allows up to 30 non-traditional credits. Non-traditional credits include any credits that do not come from an accredited college i.e. CLEP, DSST, and ACE.
Perfect. Would you know if individual courses are cheaper than taking degree granted courses or are they the same price?
Thanks for your time
Tuition is $250/cr plus a fee, so it comes out to be $810/course, whether you're a degree-seeking student or not.
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(12-16-2017, 02:36 PM)Zetineb Wrote: Afternoon everybody,
Does anyone have a degree plan for TESU for a Bachelor of Arts in Biology? It would really help me out.
Thank you for your time!
The degree you're considering is a double- whammy in terms of "hard to complete" and you won't see many (any?) here with it because of 2 main reasons.
(1) TESU doesn't offer all the classes you need, so you'll have to find them somewhere else. Not all colleges allow you to just sign up and take a class, so this issue can be challenging.
(2) Cost.
An important consideration for this degree is how you'll pay for your upper level courses and science labs. While it is true that you can take them somewhere and transfer them over, you're looking at no less than $10,000 to do that- and you won't be able to use financial aid at 2 schools to do that (TESU + somewhere else), so you'll have to technically apply for financial aid at the school where you'll be taking your sciences instead of TESU. I paid cash out of pocket for my sciences- and my lab sciences cost more than my entire AA and BA degree combined.
While it wasn't mentioned in the thread, my advice is to seriously look at taking your core sciences at your in-state community college (many offer distance learning) because this will be the best potential for saving cash. If your local CC offers tuition in the $100 range, you'll cut the costs WAY down. You''ll still have the (expensive) hurdle of filling in your upper level credits, which you should figure out ahead of starting this degree.
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(12-17-2017, 08:53 AM)cookderosa Wrote: An important consideration for this degree is how you'll pay for your upper level courses and science labs. While it is true that you can take them somewhere and transfer them over, you're looking at no less than $10,000 to do that- and you won't be able to use financial aid at 2 schools to do that (TESU + somewhere else), so you'll have to technically apply for financial aid at the school where you'll be taking your sciences instead of TESU. I paid cash out of pocket for my sciences- and my lab sciences cost more than my entire AA and BA degree combined.
While it wasn't mentioned in the thread, my advice is to seriously look at taking your core sciences at your in-state community college (many offer distance learning) because this will be the best potential for saving cash. If your local CC offers tuition in the $100 range, you'll cut the costs WAY down. You''ll still have the (expensive) hurdle of filling in your upper level credits, which you should figure out ahead of starting this degree.
Ok, dumb question. In looking through this thread, I could not find where the OP asked about financial aid, or anything of that nature. Did I miss something??
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12-17-2017, 01:58 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-17-2017, 02:25 PM by Zetineb.)
[quote pid='247928' dateline='1513468929']
(12-16-2017, 06:31 PM)sanantone Wrote: You can take individual courses at APUS and transfer them. If you decide to complete your entire degree at APUS, there are two things to keep in mind.
1. They do not offer a biology degree. They offer a natural science degree with a concentration in biology.
2. APUS only allows up to 30 non-traditional credits. Non-traditional credits include any credits that do not come from an accredited college i.e. CLEP, DSST, and ACE.
Perfect. Would you know if individual courses are cheaper than taking degree granted courses or are they the same price?
Thanks for your time
[/quote]
Tuition is $250/cr plus a fee, so it comes out to be $810/course, whether you're a degree-seeking student or not.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Damn that's pretty pricey, I guess the best thing I can do is take as many CLEP's as I can before I take the rest of the classes on campus
(12-17-2017, 08:53 AM)cookderosa Wrote: (12-16-2017, 02:36 PM)Zetineb Wrote: Afternoon everybody,
Does anyone have a degree plan for TESU for a Bachelor of Arts in Biology? It would really help me out.
Thank you for your time!
The degree you're considering is a double- whammy in terms of "hard to complete" and you won't see many (any?) here with it because of 2 main reasons.
(1) TESU doesn't offer all the classes you need, so you'll have to find them somewhere else. Not all colleges allow you to just sign up and take a class, so this issue can be challenging.
(2) Cost.
An important consideration for this degree is how you'll pay for your upper level courses and science labs. While it is true that you can take them somewhere and transfer them over, you're looking at no less than $10,000 to do that- and you won't be able to use financial aid at 2 schools to do that (TESU + somewhere else), so you'll have to technically apply for financial aid at the school where you'll be taking your sciences instead of TESU. I paid cash out of pocket for my sciences- and my lab sciences cost more than my entire AA and BA degree combined.
While it wasn't mentioned in the thread, my advice is to seriously look at taking your core sciences at your in-state community college (many offer distance learning) because this will be the best potential for saving cash. If your local CC offers tuition in the $100 range, you'll cut the costs WAY down. You''ll still have the (expensive) hurdle of filling in your upper level credits, which you should figure out ahead of starting this degree.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Thank you for this Jennifer. I was looking through University of New England, but they're pretty pricey too. I'm going to have to check with my local university and see how many credits I'll be able to transfer. I know they accept CLEP's, but not many. And I don't think they accept ACE credits. I know they allow transferred credits from accredited universities though.
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Take the Major/AOS courses at your local state university and transfer them to TESU
https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/showthr...#pid247999
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12-17-2017, 09:37 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-17-2017, 09:47 PM by cookderosa.)
(12-17-2017, 12:29 PM)dfrecore Wrote: (12-17-2017, 08:53 AM)cookderosa Wrote: An important consideration for this degree is how you'll pay for your upper level courses and science labs. While it is true that you can take them somewhere and transfer them over, you're looking at no less than $10,000 to do that- and you won't be able to use financial aid at 2 schools to do that (TESU + somewhere else), so you'll have to technically apply for financial aid at the school where you'll be taking your sciences instead of TESU. I paid cash out of pocket for my sciences- and my lab sciences cost more than my entire AA and BA degree combined.
While it wasn't mentioned in the thread, my advice is to seriously look at taking your core sciences at your in-state community college (many offer distance learning) because this will be the best potential for saving cash. If your local CC offers tuition in the $100 range, you'll cut the costs WAY down. You''ll still have the (expensive) hurdle of filling in your upper level credits, which you should figure out ahead of starting this degree.
Ok, dumb question. In looking through this thread, I could not find where the OP asked about financial aid, or anything of that nature. Did I miss something??
No, but this specific degree would have financial aid implications because of not being able to use Financial Aid to complete the degree at TESU- so I thought I'd mention it. Not everyone has 10-12 grand sitting around, many students use student loans- and that would be exceptionally tricky for this. If you use loans for your CC then you won't be able to use them for upper levels. If you use them for upper levels, then you won't be able to use them at TESU. And so on.... This degree is just expensive- no matter how you cut it. I believe it would be a fraction of the price to do Natural Sciences, but if a person wants Biology....that begs the question "why" which almost always takes us down the pre-professional degree path..... which then piles on more decision making that adds even more cost.
To Zetineb, it wouldn't matter if your local school accepted CLEP or not- you wouldn't need them to, it would be TESU's CLEP policy that would matter. What you need that you can't get via CLEP are the lab sciences. There are alternative credit sources if you piece-meal this together, but as an example- finding General Physics 1 and 2 with lab is no easy task - and if you use an alternative credit source you for sure are paying cash. Beyond that, it's the upper levels that are hard to find- and again, they can get pricy. You can do enough upper level sciences through Harvard Extension, but $$$$$.
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(12-17-2017, 07:08 PM)bjcheung77 Wrote: Take the Major/AOS courses at your local state university and transfer them to TESU
https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/showthr...#pid247999
That works if the courses are offered online (undergraduate programs and courses in biology are a rarity online) or if the OP has time to attend class on campus
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(12-17-2017, 11:27 PM)sanantone Wrote: (12-17-2017, 07:08 PM)bjcheung77 Wrote: Take the Major/AOS courses at your local state university and transfer them to TESU
https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/showthr...#pid247999
That works if the courses are offered online (undergraduate programs and courses in biology are a rarity online) or if the OP has time to attend class on campus
exactly- and not every colleges allows people to enroll if they aren't admitted degree seeking students. Sometimes those upper level courses are reserved for those in the major.
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