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June 30 2014 Straighterline answer on their 70% pass rule "Most colleges require a grade of 70% or higher to accept the credit, but some schools may require a different grade. You should check with your college to be sure. As long as you average that grade throughout the course, you will be fine. However, I can't guarantee that it will be that way forever. I believe that, in the future, they will make it so that you will need to pass the final exam to pass the course."
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lavagirl Wrote:June 30 2014 Straighterline answer on their 70% pass rule "Most colleges require a grade of 70% or higher to accept the credit, but some schools may require a different grade. You should check with your college to be sure. As long as you average that grade throughout the course, you will be fine. However, I can't guarantee that it will be that way forever. I believe that, in the future, they will make it so that you will need to pass the final exam to pass the course."
I was under the impression that that rule applied to everything but Intro to Psych....?
Goal: BA in American Studies - COSC (103/120)
In Progress: -
Completed - Straighterline: US History 2
CLEP - American Literature
Associate of Arts - COSC (August 31st, 2014)
Classes used to complete it:
Liberty University Classes: English 101, English 102, Macroeconomics, Microeconomics, Introduction to Probability & Statistics
Advanced Placement: Art History
Straighterline Classes: Introduction to Sociology, Introduction to Biology (w/ Lab), Personal Finance, Business Ethics, Introduction to Religion, American Government, Cultural Anthropology, Introduction to Nutrition, Introduction to Communications, U.S. History 1
CLEP: Analyzing & Interpreting Literature
COSC: Cornerstone
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I've tried two SL courses. The courses are not designed for a person to pass them. The are designed for failure thus to keep a subscriber paying more money to retake test and reorder a course. STAY AWAY FROM STRAIGHTERLINE!!!!!
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I thought that when I first looked at Straighterline. I hate tests! And it seemed like these classes were nothing but tests. Thanks to this forum, I completed 57 of my 78 credits through Straighterline. I lurked for a while, read what people had to say, and gave it a chance using a gift card my boss had given me as a year-end gift. I felt that since it was extra money not in my budget, I would just shrug it off if it didn't work out. I got a rough start but got the hang of it after the first class. Unfortunately I had read that the tests were open-book and was not prepared for my first final to be closed-book. I managed to pass anyway but only got awn 80 in my first class, psych. I learned tips here and through personal experience so I could make it work for me in as short a period of time as possible. The most helpful tip I learned here was to pay more attention to the text than anything else - including all that extra stuff on the SL website. I saved money by using promotion codes whenever I could apply them. I read the syllabus and looked for the book and other materials before ordering the class. That helped me save $$$ on books also.
I like that it is easy and free to send Straighterline transcripts - especially to partner schools. And it looks like they are adding more and more schools. Still, having said all that, not everything works for everyone. Despite CLEPs and DSSTs and other exams being wildly popular here, I HATE taking tests and I avoid testing the way most people avoid portfolios...lol. Plus, there are multiple ways to earn credit so SL might be a better fit for some credits but not for others.
Associate in Arts - Thomas Edison State University
Bachelor of Arts in Humanities - Thomas Edison State University
pursuing Master's degree, Applied Linguistics - Universidad Antonio de Nebrija
*credit sources: Patten University, Straighterline, Learning Counts, The Institutes, Torah College Credits, Kaplan Open College, UMUC, Thomas Edison State University (guided study liberal arts capstone)
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lavagirl Wrote:June 30 2014 Straighterline answer on their 70% pass rule "Most colleges require a grade of 70% or higher to accept the credit, but some schools may require a different grade. You should check with your college to be sure. As long as you average that grade throughout the course, you will be fine. However, I can't guarantee that it will be that way forever. I believe that, in the future, they will make it so that you will need to pass the final exam to pass the course."
If the college in question is a partner college, the minimum grade to receive credit will be listed in the course equivalency page on Straighterline's website:
Thomas Edison State College Course Equivalency Guide | StraighterLine
Associate in Arts - Thomas Edison State University
Bachelor of Arts in Humanities - Thomas Edison State University
pursuing Master's degree, Applied Linguistics - Universidad Antonio de Nebrija
*credit sources: Patten University, Straighterline, Learning Counts, The Institutes, Torah College Credits, Kaplan Open College, UMUC, Thomas Edison State University (guided study liberal arts capstone)
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