05-04-2018, 11:11 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-05-2018, 12:02 AM by jcasillas74.)
From TESU's website:
"Approval is obtaining permission before you take the course. By doing that you get confirmation that the credits you are about to earn will apply to your degree.
By selecting potential credits ahead of time you are able to make a long-range plan. You are able to get that all important confirmation about what fits into your degree before you actually take it. Taking a course and THEN finding out that it won't help to finish your degree can be among the most unpleasant student experiences. The University wants to help you avoid that experience and the unnecessary expense."
"Approval is obtaining permission before you take the course. By doing that you get confirmation that the credits you are about to earn will apply to your degree.
By selecting potential credits ahead of time you are able to make a long-range plan. You are able to get that all important confirmation about what fits into your degree before you actually take it. Taking a course and THEN finding out that it won't help to finish your degree can be among the most unpleasant student experiences. The University wants to help you avoid that experience and the unnecessary expense."
(05-04-2018, 09:01 PM)dfrecore Wrote:(05-04-2018, 05:11 PM)FlyBoyEJ Wrote:(05-04-2018, 05:05 PM)MSK9 Wrote: Well, before we all get out the pitchforks and torches, let's just wait and see how it plays out. No one here knows what's going on behind the scenes. TESU is doing us a favor by allowing us to have ANY time to finish the courses; I know it's inconvenient but that's life. We don't have a "right" to anything as far as TESU is concerned, so if you've got something you're trying to finish, your time would probably be best utilized over at Shmoop finishing it up.
If we are entitled to nothing else, we are entitled to the approved course list that it was promised they would abide by, originally for that first year of enrollment. At the very least, if you have had course approved and planned into your degree, there should be more time allowed than a month to send in transcripts. The whole point of applying, planning a degree and getting it approved, and then enrolling, is to lock in what they will accept for your degree. If that's not being honored, that's a problem. We are entitled to whatever's left of our year of approval, but even a few months more than what they're giving would be better than this.
What "approved course list" are you referring to?
(05-04-2018, 07:32 PM)acamp Wrote:(05-04-2018, 03:20 PM)Yenisei Wrote: I wonder if it's because Shmoop's finals are unproctored.
Neither are ALEKS exams though - is that why ALEKS stopped as well?
No - ALEKS ACE credit expired. Totally different thing than no longer accepting something.
(05-04-2018, 06:47 PM)scout2family Wrote: Am I understanding correctly, let's say I hadn't gotten the 3rd evaluation approved from the registrar-- I won't get the rest of my evaluation complete until I enroll for a course? I am planning on taking the Capstone in July-- for December graduation. (This scenario is if the registrar fails to get that 3rd evaluation done, like she said she would-- I really want to do everything I can to get those 30 credit from Shmoop applied!)
It's 2 separate evaluations, not evaluation of just 2 transcripts. So, when you apply and send in your transcripts, they evaluate them ALL and that's your first eval. Then, if you send more transcripts later, they will do an additional eval. It's why I normally tell people to build up a few courses (or a lot of them) on ACE before sending them in. Also, I say to send them an ACE transcript periodically (every 6 months or so) and not wait until the very end, because you don't want any surprises. Better to know there's a problem early and have time to deal with it then think you're going to take the capstone and graduate, only to find out that's not the case.
(05-04-2018, 06:49 PM)BSLIONS Wrote: I had 15 credits.... and they’re gone.
I'm thinking you should send them all immediately, and show that they were completed before the May 2 (3?) cutoff date, and you may be ok.