01-23-2024, 10:46 PM
Hi to the forum again! I'm a few credits into my BA Psych at TESU now, and I'm currently working (self-paced, which is an euphemism for slowly ) through the CSM Learn course. I'm mildly dyscalculic, but this is specific to numbers and formulae -- from a logical/perceptual reasoning point I'm strong. I'm really enjoying this course, given its focus on the latter, and hope to transfer it in soon.
I noticed SeeMore have two "post-CSM" courses available (since their recent reorganization?), Challenge Problems and Technical Math Essentials. Neither seem to be recommended by ACE(/NCCRS), but both are 'more advanced than' CSM and require it as a prerequisite. I'm interested at trying my hand at Challenge Problems once I finish CSM, given its relevance to my area of interest (social science research). It appears to be free for people who've taken CSM, so there's no loss to trying.
What I'm curious about is: has anyone taken these courses and attempted to transfer them for credit, or done so for a similar "college-level but not organizationally recommended" course? I searched a fair amount and didn't see anything. TESU's transfer policies sound to me like they don't have a hard rule against credit that hasn't been ACE/NCCRS recommended, just that it's unlikely. This particular case -- where the courses that haven't been recommended are advanced versions of one that has been -- is something I can't think of a similar example for, and may be an exception to general rules against non-recommended courses. I think I'd benefit from taking Challenge Problems regardless, but it'd be really great if I could get some credit too.
I noticed SeeMore have two "post-CSM" courses available (since their recent reorganization?), Challenge Problems and Technical Math Essentials. Neither seem to be recommended by ACE(/NCCRS), but both are 'more advanced than' CSM and require it as a prerequisite. I'm interested at trying my hand at Challenge Problems once I finish CSM, given its relevance to my area of interest (social science research). It appears to be free for people who've taken CSM, so there's no loss to trying.
What I'm curious about is: has anyone taken these courses and attempted to transfer them for credit, or done so for a similar "college-level but not organizationally recommended" course? I searched a fair amount and didn't see anything. TESU's transfer policies sound to me like they don't have a hard rule against credit that hasn't been ACE/NCCRS recommended, just that it's unlikely. This particular case -- where the courses that haven't been recommended are advanced versions of one that has been -- is something I can't think of a similar example for, and may be an exception to general rules against non-recommended courses. I think I'd benefit from taking Challenge Problems regardless, but it'd be really great if I could get some credit too.