Posts: 1,340
Threads: 388
Likes Received: 494 in 343 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Jan 2021
I've been doing a little reading about the ECTS and while it's really not that hard to understand the basics, one thing that's not clear to me is if there is built into that system any source(s) of alternative credit such as CLEP, etc. or is it based entirely on standard coursework at universities.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_C...ion_System
•
Posts: 441
Threads: 29
Likes Received: 46 in 43 posts
Likes Given: 1
Joined: Jul 2019
(03-03-2021, 11:40 AM)Alpha Wrote: I've been doing a little reading about the ECTS and while it's really not that hard to understand the basics, one thing that's not clear to me is if there is built into that system any source(s) of alternative credit such as CLEP, etc. or is it based entirely on standard coursework at universities.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_C...ion_System In the Netherlands, it is only coursework. When you switch to another university you start with zero. Sometimes are you allowed to transfer 30 ects to put in "free space" or minor when you change.
COMPLETED
ASU: Human Origins (3)
Sophia: Developing Effective Teams (1) Student Success (1) The Ess. of Managing Conflict (1) Art History 1 (3) US History 1(3) Religions (3) Environmental science (3) Ancient Greek Philosophers (3) English Comp 1 (3)
Visual communications (3) Art History 2 (3) Introduction to psychology (3) Introduction to Ethics (3) US History 2 (3) Human Biology (3)
Communication at Work (3) Conflict resolution(3)
The institute: Ethics 312 (3)
Shmoop: Holocaust Literature (3) American National Government (3) Introduction to Drama (3)
IN PROGRESS
Sophia:
•
Posts: 11,060
Threads: 153
Likes Received: 6,012 in 4,001 posts
Likes Given: 4,216
Joined: Mar 2018
Europe really expects you to stay with the same university throughout your school experience. It makes sense: universities are free/cheap for EU residents so why make things harder than they should be? Not being able to accelerate is, as I understand it, a feature and not a bug.
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
Posts: 8,462
Threads: 92
Likes Received: 3,563 in 2,546 posts
Likes Given: 4,222
Joined: May 2020
(03-03-2021, 01:19 PM)rachel83az Wrote: Europe really expects you to stay with the same university throughout your school experience. It makes sense: universities are free/cheap for EU residents so why make things harder than they should be? Not being able to accelerate is, as I understand it, a feature and not a bug.
Man if that was how the US worked, many of us would have completed our degrees YEARS ago! Transferring is a big thing here and then you get squat for credit so it makes no sense. And we pay quite a bit for this goofy system here.
Posts: 11,060
Threads: 153
Likes Received: 6,012 in 4,001 posts
Likes Given: 4,216
Joined: Mar 2018
(03-03-2021, 02:16 PM)ss20ts Wrote: (03-03-2021, 01:19 PM)rachel83az Wrote: Europe really expects you to stay with the same university throughout your school experience. It makes sense: universities are free/cheap for EU residents so why make things harder than they should be? Not being able to accelerate is, as I understand it, a feature and not a bug.
Man if that was how the US worked, many of us would have completed our degrees YEARS ago! Transferring is a big thing here and then you get squat for credit so it makes no sense. And we pay quite a bit for this goofy system here.
I think that they are slightly more selective about who they let into their programs. But, yeah, once you're in, the universities are pretty affordable. The biggest expense is usually your housing, AFAIK.
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
•
Posts: 561
Threads: 0
Likes Received: 161 in 120 posts
Likes Given: 155
Joined: Jun 2012
03-04-2021, 01:31 PM
(This post was last modified: 03-04-2021, 01:43 PM by Johann.)
I've been hearing (elsewhere) from some folks who believe that somehow ECTS can be transmuted into credits at the Big 3. The idea is to earn certificates in Europe that carry from maybe 30 to 60 ECTS, then have a Big 3 school accept / declare them as one half that number of credits. I know the math says that 2 ECTS = I US credit (time-wise, etc.) but I thought this "direct -to-credits-at Big 3" interchange was either unlikely or impossible.
There are oodles of these certs, available by DL - offering genuine ECTS and some are INCREDIBLY cheap. I'm no Big 3 expert. Many of you are. What do you think? Can it be done? If so, how? Course by course basis, maybe? If it IS possible - how much would it likely cost? There may be grad and undergrad ECTS involved here.
•
Posts: 775
Threads: 30
Likes Received: 313 in 216 posts
Likes Given: 330
Joined: Aug 2018
(03-04-2021, 01:31 PM)Johann Wrote: I've been hearing (elsewhere) from some folks who believe that somehow ECTS can be transmuted into credits at the Big 3. The idea is to earn certificates in Europe that carry from maybe 30 to 60 ECTS, then have a Big 3 school accept / declare them as one half that number of credits. I know the math says that 2 ECTS = I US credit (time-wise, etc.) but I thought this "direct -to-credits-at Big 3" interchange was either unlikely or impossible.
There are oodles of these certs, available by DL - offering genuine ECTS and some are INCREDIBLY cheap. I'm no Big 3 expert. Many of you are. What do you think? Can it be done? If so, how? Course by course basis, maybe? If it IS possible - how much would it likely cost? There may be grad and undergrad ECTS involved here. It wouldn't be direct. It would have to go through a Company suchas WES that translates the credits
Sent from my SM-G981V using DegreeForum.net mobile app
In Progress: CSU MS Occupational Safety | TESU BALS HR & Computer Science | TESU AAS Admin Studies
Universidad Isabel I: ENEB MBA, HRM
Completed: TESU AAS Environmental, Safety & Tech, BA in Environmental Studies/ Natural Science and Mathematics
•
Posts: 11,060
Threads: 153
Likes Received: 6,012 in 4,001 posts
Likes Given: 4,216
Joined: Mar 2018
(03-04-2021, 01:31 PM)Johann Wrote: I've been hearing (elsewhere) from some folks who believe that somehow ECTS can be transmuted into credits at the Big 3. The idea is to earn certificates in Europe that carry from maybe 30 to 60 ECTS, then have a Big 3 school accept / declare them as one half that number of credits. I know the math says that 2 ECTS = I US credit (time-wise, etc.) but I thought this "direct -to-credits-at Big 3" interchange was either unlikely or impossible.
There are oodles of these certs, available by DL - offering genuine ECTS and some are INCREDIBLY cheap. I'm no Big 3 expert. Many of you are. What do you think? Can it be done? If so, how? Course by course basis, maybe? If it IS possible - how much would it likely cost? There may be grad and undergrad ECTS involved here.
It wouldn't be direct, as already stated by ROYISAGIRL but ECTS from an actual university should still count as RA credits because the studies were completed at a university. The evaluator tells the American university what the completed studies "mean" and how they should be applied.
What is DL? Is it a university or are the certificates granted by actual universities? If not, they probably wouldn't count as RA credits. XAMK is currently the "best" deal for ECTS at a cost of $0 per ECTS. Unfortunately, the courses they offer wouldn't necessarily apply to any and every degree. Mostly to business or CS degrees.
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
Posts: 561
Threads: 0
Likes Received: 161 in 120 posts
Likes Given: 155
Joined: Jun 2012
03-04-2021, 04:45 PM
(This post was last modified: 03-04-2021, 04:57 PM by Johann.)
Rachel83az: It wouldn't be direct, as already stated by ROYISAGIRL but ECTS from an actual university should still count as RA credits because the studies were completed at a university. The evaluator tells the American university what the completed studies "mean" and how they should be applied.
What is DL? Is it a university or are the certificates granted by actual universities? If not, they probably wouldn't count as RA credits. XAMK is currently the "best" deal for ECTS at a cost of $0 per ECTS. Unfortunately, the courses they offer wouldn't necessarily apply to any and every degree. Mostly to business or CS degrees.
Johann: They seem to be a mix. Most are taught by private schools and when completed, certified and awarded by partner universities. ENEB/Isabel 1 type of thing -- with them or some other players. Some directly from the university, I believe - not 100% sure. Thanks for the info. Looks like yes, it's possible but I'm pretty sure course-by course evaluation would likely cost more than some of the certificates. Still, if you could get 60 ECTS points evaluated as 30 credits for say, $300, that would be pretty cheap, even when you add in the cost of the cert.
As I thought, it's not possible without a recognized evaluation. I got the impression that some (elsewhere) believed it could be done with NO intermediary - but only at the Big 3, by some special process. Not so, obviously..
Thanks, Rachel and Roy, for the info. Really clear.
•
Posts: 8,462
Threads: 92
Likes Received: 3,563 in 2,546 posts
Likes Given: 4,222
Joined: May 2020
(03-04-2021, 04:45 PM)Johann Wrote: Rachel83az: It wouldn't be direct, as already stated by ROYISAGIRL but ECTS from an actual university should still count as RA credits because the studies were completed at a university. The evaluator tells the American university what the completed studies "mean" and how they should be applied.
What is DL? Is it a university or are the certificates granted by actual universities? If not, they probably wouldn't count as RA credits. XAMK is currently the "best" deal for ECTS at a cost of $0 per ECTS. Unfortunately, the courses they offer wouldn't necessarily apply to any and every degree. Mostly to business or CS degrees.
Johann: They seem to be a mix. Most are taught by private schools and when completed, certified by partner universities. ENEB/Isabel 1 type of thing -- with them or some other players. Some directly from the university, I believe - not 100% sure. Thanks for the info. Looks like yes, it's possible but I'm pretty sure course-by course evaluation would likely cost more than some of the certificates. Still, if you could get 60 ECTS points evaluated as 30 credits for say, $300, that would be pretty cheap, even when you add in the cost of the cert.
As I thought, it's not possible without a recognized evaluation. I got the impression that some (elsewhere) believed it could be done with NO intermediary - but only at the Big 3. Not so, obviously..
Thanks, Rachel and Roy, for the info. Really clear.
In the US though most colleges/universities require international transcripts to be processed by WES and then sent from WES to the college/university. The evaluators let the school know what the transcripts mean, they don't tell the school how to accept the credits though. That is up to each individual school. Just because something is RA credit does not mean that a college/university has to accept it. Same holds true for all schools in the US. Transfer credits are quite often issues when transferring to traditional B&M schools. They're less of a problem in online programs such as the main ones we talk about on here.
•
|