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Intro To Computing - use for Nat Sci/Math for TESC Business Degree?
#1
For the BSBA degree from TESC the credit distribution for Natural Sciences and Mathematics are:
1. Precal (3)
2. Statistics (3)
3. Other Natural Sciences (3)
MUST INCLUDE AT LEAST TWO SUBJECT AREAS

Ok, so the Precal & Statistics are required. IF we use DANTES Intro to Computing (listed in the TESC College Catalog DANTES Exams as a Natural Sciences/Mathematics) for #3 Other Natural Sciences will that work or will it violate the MUST INCLUDE AT LEAST TWO SUBJECT AREAS rule?

One more question: the Statistics required for this degree - Is that the Introduction to Statistics or the Business Statistics? Seems like I remember reading somewhere it is the Introduction to Statistics but I can't find the thread.
Thanks for your help!
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#2
Quantitative analysis can also be used instead of Pre-Cal.







Rhashad Hicks
Liberty University, DBA
starting 02/2023

Western Governors University, MBA
Organization & Strategy 2013
Educational Design 2021

TESC Bachelors (18 Months)
American History 2011

CLEP
English Comp w/essay | A & I literature | American Government | Prin. of Management | Prin. of Marketing | Intro to computers | Business Law | Intro to Sociology | Psychology | social sciences & history | U.S. History I | U.S. History II | Human Growth & Dev. | Educational Psych | Microeconomics | Macroeconomics

DANTES
Civil War & Recon. | Technical Writing | Prin. of Supervision | History of Vietnam | Organizational Behavior | Substance abuse | Management Info Systems | Intro to Business | Principles of Counseling | Modern Middle East

ALEKS
Beg. Algebra | Intermediate Algebra | Pre-Calculus | Business Statistics

STRAIGHTERLINE
Accounting I | Accounting II
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#3
Did you ever find the answer to this?

Also, for the Gen. Management degree, Intro to Computers is listed as a business core requirement.

Would the DSST Intro to computing satisfy this requirement and/or the Natural Science requirement?

Can a DSST "double-dip" and satisfy multiple degree requirements?
gck
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#4
Rhashad Wrote:Quantitative analysis can also be used instead of Pre-Cal.

What exactly IS quantitative analysis? Big Grin
-Andrew T.
[SIZE="1"]
Finished: 120 credits! [BSBA Thomas Edison State College] See my degree plan here.
[/SIZE]
Now Available for Amazon Kindle: How to Test Out of Your First Year of College (And More)
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#5
Paul Wrote:IF we use DANTES Intro to Computing (listed in the TESC College Catalog DANTES Exams as a Natural Sciences/Mathematics) for #3 Other Natural Sciences will that work or will it violate the MUST INCLUDE AT LEAST TWO SUBJECT AREAS rule?

One more question: the Statistics required for this degree - Is that the Introduction to Statistics or the Business Statistics? Seems like I remember reading somewhere it is the Introduction to Statistics but I can't find the thread.
Thanks for your help!

Edit: I have changed some of the information in this post because I gave some wrong info earlier.


Technically, yes, taking the Intro to Computing exam COULD count for your final 3 credits for Natural Science/Math requirements; HOWEVER, since Intro to Computing is listed as one of your core business requirements on the TESC template, it cannot be used for both your core business requirements AND your General Ed requirements.

I'm working on the same degree at TESC.....I took the CLEP Natural Sciences for 6 credits. That way, I could use the surplus 3 credits to apply toward my General Ed electives. To fulfill your remaining three Nat Sci/Math credits, you could take CLEP Natural Sci like I did and have 3 extra credits, or you could take DSST Astronomy, Environment & Humanity, Physical Geology, College Algebra, Physical Science; or you could take CLEP College Algebra or Calculus (all worth 3 credits).

And yes, the Principles of Statistics DSST will satisfy the stats requirement for your BSBA. You don't need to take the Business Stats class unless you just want to. Big Grin
-Andrew T.
[SIZE="1"]
Finished: 120 credits! [BSBA Thomas Edison State College] See my degree plan here.
[/SIZE]
Now Available for Amazon Kindle: How to Test Out of Your First Year of College (And More)
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#6
Paul -

Yes, COS-101 Intro to Computing does count as a Natural Science credit. You could also use ALEKS courses Intermediate Algebra (MAT-115) or College Algebra (MAT-121) to fill the Natural Sciences requirements. They would be a great refresher (if needed) for QBA or PreCalc.

You can take the course Computer Concepts and Applications (CIS-107) which will transcribe as a Natural Science or Business requirement. It is basically the same information used for the COS-101 DSST exam. After I finished the class I took the DSST exam. If you actually pay attention in class (which I didn't-skated through for an easy B+) you would also be set up for the MIS exam with very light review.

So far as stats is concerned you could use principles of stats STA-201 or business stats OPM-351. Although not guaranteed, as a business major they may give you credit for both.

"Setting a goal is not the main thing. It is deciding how you will go about achieving it and staying with that plan." -Tom Landry

TESC:
AAS, Admin Studies. 2010
BA, Social Sciences. 2010. Arnold Fletcher Award.
AAS, Environmental, Safety & Security Technologies. 2011
BSBA, General Management. 2011. Arnold Fletcher Award. Sigma Beta Delta (ΣΒΔWink!
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#7
Levi_1989 Wrote:What exactly IS quantitative analysis? Big Grin

Edit for clarity - QBA (MAT-119) is for business majors; in my opinion its a mix of stats/precalc. An advisor at TESC described it as a lighter version of precalc (MAT-129).

"Setting a goal is not the main thing. It is deciding how you will go about achieving it and staying with that plan." -Tom Landry

TESC:
AAS, Admin Studies. 2010
BA, Social Sciences. 2010. Arnold Fletcher Award.
AAS, Environmental, Safety & Security Technologies. 2011
BSBA, General Management. 2011. Arnold Fletcher Award. Sigma Beta Delta (ΣΒΔWink!
Reply
#8
bricabrac Wrote:Yes, COS-101 Intro to Computing does count as a Natural Science credit.

bricabrac,

I understand that DSST Intro to Computing would technically count towards the Natural Science/Math requirement, but if he's going to use DSST Intro to Comp to fulfill the business core requirement for "Computer Concepts and Applications/Introduction to Computers/CIS," then the same test can't be used for both requirements.....correct?

See this TESC link: Thomas Edison State College | BSBA in General Management Credit Distribution
-Andrew T.
[SIZE="1"]
Finished: 120 credits! [BSBA Thomas Edison State College] See my degree plan here.
[/SIZE]
Now Available for Amazon Kindle: How to Test Out of Your First Year of College (And More)
Reply
#9
Levi_1989,

CIS-107 (course) and COS-101 (test) do not duplicate. Although tests COS-101-CE and COS-101-DE are duplicates. I know its a bit confusing.

Any who, to get the best bang for your buck -
  1. Take the course CIS-107/Computer Concepts & Applications to fulfill the business core requirement (much easier than COS-101 because it does not include BASIC programming)
  2. Test DSST COS-101/Introduction to Computing for gen ed requirement (it is basically the same information as the CIS-107 course)
  3. You can then go one step further and test DSST MIS-301/Managment Information Systems for UL business or gen ed credit after brief review of IC flashcards.
Bottom line - the test version of COS-101-DE is much easier than the actual course. CIS-107 counts as a science course and gives you the necessary foundation for other computer science tests so why not take it?

Hope this helps!

Levi_1989 Wrote:bricabrac,

I understand that DSST Intro to Computing would technically count towards the Natural Science/Math requirement, but if he's going to use DSST Intro to Comp to fulfill the business core requirement for "Computer Concepts and Applications/Introduction to Computers/CIS," then the same test can't be used for both requirements.....correct?

See this TESC link: Thomas Edison State College | BSBA in General Management Credit Distribution

"Setting a goal is not the main thing. It is deciding how you will go about achieving it and staying with that plan." -Tom Landry

TESC:
AAS, Admin Studies. 2010
BA, Social Sciences. 2010. Arnold Fletcher Award.
AAS, Environmental, Safety & Security Technologies. 2011
BSBA, General Management. 2011. Arnold Fletcher Award. Sigma Beta Delta (ΣΒΔWink!
Reply


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