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That's if you want to get the military tuition discount.
Graduate of Not VUL or ENEB
MS, MSS and Graduate Cert
AAS, AS, BA, and BS
CLEP
Intro Psych 70, US His I 64, Intro Soc 63, Intro Edu Psych 70, A&I Lit 64, Bio 68, Prin Man 69, Prin Mar 68
DSST
Life Dev Psych 62, Fund Coun 68, Intro Comp 469, Intro Astr 56, Env & Hum 70, HTYH 456, MIS 451, Prin Sup 453, HRM 62, Bus Eth 458
ALEKS
Int Alg, Coll Alg
TEEX
4 credits
TECEP
Fed Inc Tax, Sci of Nutr, Micro, Strat Man, Med Term, Pub Relations
CSU
Sys Analysis & Design, Programming, Cyber
SL
Intro to Comm, Microbio, Acc I
Uexcel
A&P
Davar
Macro, Intro to Fin, Man Acc
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And to make it as painless as possible, TESC offers a few classes that are worth 6 credits each, so in essence, he can take 2 classes and fill that requirement. Someone can help me on these, one is in psych (social psychology) War and something, and Environmental something. LOL I'm no help, but it's a short cut he can look into.
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cookderosa Wrote:And to make it as painless as possible, TESC offers a few classes that are worth 6 credits each, so in essence, he can take 2 classes and fill that requirement. Someone can help me on these, one is in psych (social psychology) War and something, and Environmental something. LOL I'm no help, but it's a short cut he can look into.
Ok, I couldn't leave you hanging:
ENS-314 Global Environmental Change 6cr (Natural Science area)
HIS-356 War and American Society 6 cr (Social Science area subject History)
PSY-379 Social Psychology 6 cr (Social Science area subject Psychology)
Choosing 2 of those, plus using 9 FEMA for free electives would be a great start.
That would leave English (6) which he has to take (but can CLEP), and that's about half the degree!
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cookderosa Wrote:Ok, I couldn't leave you hanging:
ENS-314 Global Environmental Change 6cr (Natural Science area)
HIS-356 War and American Society 6 cr (Social Science area subject History)
PSY-379 Social Psychology 6 cr (Social Science area subject Psychology)
Choosing 2 of those, plus using 9 FEMA for free electives would be a great start.
That would leave English (6) which he has to take (but can CLEP), and that's about half the degree!
I notice those are 30-level classes you mentioned; would he need those in an associates program?
Oh also he's also already CLEP'ed English Comp and Analyzing/Interpreting Literature. I think most of free electives, as we found out today, will be filled by arbitrary ACE-reccommended military experiential SMART credits.
BA - Organizational Management
Ashford University Online
120 Credits - Graduated!
3.98 GPA
CLEP
02-28-2012 [64] College Composition Modular
04-05-2012 [74] Analyzing/Interpreting Literature
05-02-2012 [59] Principles of Marketing
05-02-2012 [54] College Mathematics (Studied with ALEKS)
05-08-2012 [57] Natural Sciences
05-10-2012 [55] Principles of Management
06-12-2012 [66] Info Systems and Computer Apps
06-19-2012 [53] Introductory Sociology
07-11-2012 [51] Humanities
07-11-2012 [57] Human Growth and Development
08-02-2012 [57] Social Sciences and History
09-06-2012 [60] Introductory Psychology
DSST
08-29-2012 [458] Business Ethics and Society
08-29-2012 [440] Principles of Supervision
09-13-2012 [_68] General Anthropology
10-16-2012 [_56] Human Resource Management
10-16-2012 [424] Management Information Systems
11-06-2012 [463] Ethics in America
12-04-2012 [429] Introduction to Business
12-05-2012 [450] Introduction to Computing
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01-28-2013, 09:34 AM
(This post was last modified: 01-28-2013, 09:41 AM by Prloko.)
OtherSyde Wrote:OK I think I get it now. Any associates will do. Then he does Radiology schooling.
But now we're at the college office and the TESC rep keeps trying to tell us that TESC has a 12-credit minimum residency rule. Never heard of this before, I thought TESC was one of the few with no residency requirement? Is this a new TESC policy? Or just BS to tray and get him to attend more classes there?
What the education office rep was telling you about is the Military Degree Completion Program (MDCP) residency requirement. TESC normally requires no residency (maybe except a capstone) but requires a rather large enrollment fee ($1,800 for residents and military) that is not covered by TA. TESC offers the MDCP with no enrollment fee, but the military student must get 12 residency credits for an Associates and 24 residency credits for a bachelors. The military tuition rate is set at $250 per S/H under this program and there is no direct cost to the military member except application and graduation fees and books.
If your sailor has the $ and wants to "CLEP out" of an AA, he can pay the $1,800. Keep in mind that ALL TESC credits count as residency. This includes TECEP exams, guided study and online classes. He can enroll under MDCP take 4 TECEPs at $99 each and be out $396 dollars if it's needed in a rush.
I remember recently a U.S. congressperson was trying to get a law passed that would allow any U.S. servicemember to get a degree from the CCAF. I don't know if this was enacted, but may be worth looking into.
Also, if I was getting an associates only, I would go with Charter Oak State College instead of TESC. Charter oak has no residency except for the required 8 week cornerstone course and does not charge an enrollment fee to the military. Also, I believe since the Navy has a Submarine base in CT, COSC has a working relationship with the Navy through NCPDLP. It would be much cheaper and quicker to get it through COSC. TESC takes forever on everything. http://www.charteroak.edu/prospective/ad...ns/ncpdlp/
Hope this helps.
CLEPS Passed: 10 DSST Passed: 11 TECEPS: 1
PrLoko-isms
Don't waste time by trying to save time. The only sure way to complete your degree is to knock out credits quickly and efficiently.
Don't let easiness bite you in the rear. Know your endgame (where you want to be) and plan backward from there. Your education is a means to an end.
Be honest professionally, socially and academically. There are people (especially little ones) who look up to you and they're going by your example.
Be proud. Whether you're an Engineer or Fast Food worker, there is honor and dignity in hard work.
Picking on people weaker than you only proves that you are a weak person.
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