02-18-2023, 10:34 PM (This post was last modified: 02-18-2023, 10:34 PM by joshua27.)
I'm beginning my degree journey at UMPI in the Spring II term for a BBA in Supply Chain Management. In the mean time I have some down time until that starts so I was wondering if there was an easy second bachelors I might be able to achieve at TESU with minimal work? I have amassed around 124 credits that would transfer to TESU. I'm a bit unsure on how the Google and IBM certs will transfer. Credly recommends 12 and 9 credits respectively. 33 of my credits listed below are RA credits from brick and mortar schools.
Is there a degree I could fit all these into fairly easily and only have to do a capstone?
In addition to the 24 new credits (must be earned AFTER conferral of your last degree) and a capstone, it's going to be EXPENSIVE to do it through TESU. You'll have to either pay thousands for the residency waiver, or thousands for 16 credits taken at TESU. If you can do those 16cr all in one term, you can save some money with the flat rate tuition option, but that's a rough way to go about it, imo
Northwestern California University School of Law JD Law, 2027 (in progress, currently 2L)
Georgia Tech MS Cybersecurity (Policy), 2021
Thomas Edison State University BA Computer Science, 2023 BA Psychology, 2016 AS Business Administration, 2023 Certificate in Operations Management, 2023 Certificate in Computer Information Systems, 2023
(02-19-2023, 01:04 AM)jsd Wrote: In addition to the 24 new credits (must be earned AFTER conferral of your last degree) and a capstone, it's going to be EXPENSIVE to do it through TESU. You'll have to either pay thousands for the residency waiver, or thousands for 16 credits taken at TESU. If you can do those 16cr all in one term, you can save some money with the flat rate tuition option, but that's a rough way to go about it, imo
Not sure what you guys are talking about. I’ve never earned a degree at TESU. I asked if I could use all the transferable credits I currently have to earn a second degree at TESU. Second being in addition to the degree im currently working on at UMPI.
Yes, once you earn a bachelor's degree at ANY college or university, TESU has additional rules for obtaining a second/subsequent degree. It will almost certainly take longer for you to complete the TESU degree than the UMPI degree, so you'd run into those rules. At least 24 new credits are required by TESU after the award of your most recent degree.
UMPI also has its own rules for obtaining another degree. So you can't just pause UMPI while getting your TESU degree either. You're best off sticking to UMPI. If you're bored, I'd suggest completing some more Coursera certificates or something.
In progress: TESU - BA Computer Science; BSBA CIS; ASNSM Math & CS; ASBA
Completed: Pierpont - AAS BOG
Sophia (so many), The Institutes (old), Study.com (5 courses)
ASU: Human Origins, Astronomy, Intro Health & Wellness, Western Civilization, Computer Appls & Info Technology, Intro Programming
Strayer: CIS175, CIS111, WRK100, MAT210
02-19-2023, 08:32 AM (This post was last modified: 02-19-2023, 09:14 AM by joshua27.)
(02-19-2023, 08:10 AM)rachel83az Wrote: Yes, once you earn a bachelor's degree at ANY college or university, TESU has additional rules for obtaining a second/subsequent degree. It will almost certainly take longer for you to complete the TESU degree than the UMPI degree, so you'd run into those rules. At least 24 new credits are required by TESU after the award of your most recent degree.
UMPI also has its own rules for obtaining another degree. So you can't just pause UMPI while getting your TESU degree either. You're best off sticking to UMPI. If you're bored, I'd suggest completing some more Coursera certificates or something.
I'd be starting both programs as a first time degree earner so I don't see a problem. I also am curious what rules UMPI has specifically that would prohibit this.
02-19-2023, 01:02 PM (This post was last modified: 02-19-2023, 01:10 PM by origamishuttle.)
(02-19-2023, 08:32 AM)joshua27 Wrote: I'd be starting both programs as a first time degree earner so I don't see a problem. I also am curious what rules UMPI has specifically that would prohibit this.
The difference in requirements for completing a first bachelor's degree before either UMPI or TESU is notable. For UMPI, GEC is waived. For TESU, gen eds and electives are waived, including the cornerstone. However, if you're trying to complete both degrees in parallel, then you will need to complete TESU first. If you complete UMPI first, then TESU will want 24 new credits after the UMPI degree is conferred. There is no such requirement from UMPI. If this is your plan, then work with Jessica so you don't waste time on GEC, assuming you have some left, since they would be waived after completing the TESU degree. However, if you want to complete UMPI first, then plan to complete the final 8 courses for TESU after the UMPI degree is conferred, and don't worry about the cornerstone or gen eds.
Pierpont Community & Technical College2022
Associate of Applied Science - Board of Governors - Area of Emphasis: Information Systems Western Governors University2022
Bachelor of Science - Cloud Computing Charter Oak State College2023
Bachelor of Science - General Studies - Concentration: Information Systems Studies Thomas Edison State University2023
Bachelor of Arts - Computer Science
Associate in Science in Natural Sciences and Mathematics - Mathematics University of Maine at Presque Isle2023
Bachelor of Applied Science - Minor: Project Management
02-19-2023, 01:39 PM (This post was last modified: 02-19-2023, 01:41 PM by allvia.)
(02-19-2023, 09:14 AM)joshua27 Wrote:
(02-19-2023, 08:49 AM)allvia Wrote: What degree would you be looking at for TESU?
No preference, that's why I asked to be honest.
Unless you have a particular degree in mind - such as a BACS, for example. With a plan it 'may' be easy to obtain a 2nd bachelor (the plan being critical) at TESU, but it certainly won't be cheap or fast(er than UMPI). You would be better of going for a master degree (MBA or otherwise, depending on your long term goals). There are plenty of (relatively) 'easy' and cheaper master options than a 2nd bachelor through TESU options; which would almost certainly get you more bang for your time and money (ROI). There are RA master degree programs that cost less than the TESU residency waiver alone.