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XAMK
(09-22-2023, 01:08 PM)bjcheung77 Wrote: That's awesome, so they do mention somewhere these are transferred in as Foreign (RA) equivalent... you just need to decide now on the residency waiver or taking a flat rate term...  Good to know what the courses come in as and the credit numbers too... all those 999's, just wow...
The transfer summary says TESU - Foreign for these credits and there’s a running total of foreign credits applied in My Progress for each program. 

My son will be doing the SOS & the 2 required capstones via TESU. He will likely end up doing a flat-rate term with two more classes, but hasn’t decided yet. He’s still working through Sophia and later SDC.

(09-22-2023, 01:16 PM)rachel83az Wrote: Too bad they're all LL. But that's still a lot of good credits for almost nothing!

He filed an appeal with ACEI but after not gaining any traction with the provided syllabi, he did not feel like chasing it further as the juice wasn’t worth the squeeze. One could pursue further by referring to the degree plans available via XAMK. 

At less than $6 per credit, you won’t hear me complain.
Completed: HAU MBA | BA Economics (US) | Finland Open Studies @ XAMK/Metropolia/Helsinki/Laurea
Certs Completed: Scrum CSPO/CSM | Google PM/Data Analytics/Marketing
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It´s understandable that "The Basics of Financial Aspects of Leadership" ending being finance and not leadership (as it previously reported and later changed), as that course is actually just a finance course.

Right now there´s a Graduate level leadership course in XAMK at 60 euros.
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Our son needs 3 credits of history. He has done modules 10-17 of the video games creation course at XAMK, but only Module 10 appears to be history ("History of Games Parts 1 and 2), which is 1 European credit = most likely 0.5 US credits.

Has anybody else here has this evaluated or transferred to TESU? My question is: How did the above poster get 3 US credits for "History of Games"? Which XAMK courses were those?

If XAMK does not work out for history, we are considering to be guinea pigs for Coopersmith's "History of Board Games". It sounds like fun and appropriate for a 13 year old. We are staying away from most history courses because he is very sensitive to violence and war related themes, and from art history because someone here said that it has a lot of nudity. Well, he might actually like that...
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(12-30-2023, 07:47 AM)homeschoolmom1 Wrote: If XAMK does not work out for history, we are considering to be guinea pigs for Coopersmith's "History of Board Games". It sounds like fun and appropriate for a 13 year old. We are staying away from most history courses because he is very sensitive to violence and war related themes, and from art history because someone here said that it has a lot of nudity. Well, he might actually like that...

Just for reference it doesn't appear an art history course would meet the history gen ed requirement at TESU. It would be classed as an art course rather than a history course, basically.

Conversely, it's a good sign that Coopersmith's new History of Board Games course is recommended by NCCRS for credit categorically "in History, Liberal Arts, or Social Science."
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(12-30-2023, 07:47 AM)homeschoolmom1 Wrote: Our son needs 3 credits of history. He has done modules 10-17 of the video games creation course at XAMK, but only Module 10 appears to be history ("History of Games Parts 1 and 2), which is 1 European credit = most likely 0.5 US credits.

Has anybody else here has this evaluated or transferred to TESU? My question is: How did the above poster get 3 US credits for "History of Games"? Which XAMK courses were those?

If XAMK does not work out for history, we are considering to be guinea pigs for Coopersmith's "History of Board Games". It sounds like fun and appropriate for a 13 year old. We are staying away from most history courses because he is very sensitive to violence and war related themes, and from art history because someone here said that it has a lot of nudity. Well, he might actually like that...

IIRC, Art History I at Sophia doesn't have (much?) nudity. Maybe some Michaelangelo or something? You can download the course PDFs to preview them (whether you have an active subscription or not). Art History II is absolutely not appropriate for young children. I'd guess 15+, maybe?, and that's the bare minimum; at least 16 or 17 would probably be better (there are some very, very mature topics in Art History II). Art History I is mostly prehistoric stuff, Egyptian, etc.

But, as already stated, Art History doesn't count as history at most universities.

Unfortunately, he's too young for OnlineDegree. That history course was pretty good, nothing graphic (that I could remember), but there was discussion of war in the abstract.

You could preview the US History courses at Sophia the same as Art History. I don't remember those being violent or whatever, though it's been a while since I took them.

I also don't remember https://ea.asu.edu/courses/global-histor...0-hst-100/ being particularly graphic either. You could take it yourself for $25, then if it's appropriate he could take it the next time it's offered.
In progress:
TESU - BA Computer Science; BSBA CIS; ASNSM Math & CS; ASBA

Completed:
Pierpont - AAS BOG
Sophia (so many), The Institutes (old), Study.com (5 courses)
ASU: Human Origins, Astronomy, Intro Health & Wellness, Western Civilization, Computer Appls & Info Technology, Intro Programming
Strayer: CIS175, CIS111, WRK100, MAT210
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(01-04-2024, 08:42 AM)rachel83az Wrote:
(12-30-2023, 07:47 AM)homeschoolmom1 Wrote: Our son needs 3 credits of history. He has done modules 10-17 of the video games creation course at XAMK, but only Module 10 appears to be history ("History of Games Parts 1 and 2), which is 1 European credit = most likely 0.5 US credits.

Has anybody else here has this evaluated or transferred to TESU? My question is: How did the above poster get 3 US credits for "History of Games"? Which XAMK courses were those?

If XAMK does not work out for history, we are considering to be guinea pigs for Coopersmith's "History of Board Games". It sounds like fun and appropriate for a 13 year old. We are staying away from most history courses because he is very sensitive to violence and war related themes, and from art history because someone here said that it has a lot of nudity. Well, he might actually like that...

IIRC, Art History I at Sophia doesn't have (much?) nudity. Maybe some Michaelangelo or something? You can download the course PDFs to preview them (whether you have an active subscription or not). Art History II is absolutely not appropriate for young children. I'd guess 15+, maybe?, and that's the bare minimum; at least 16 or 17 would probably be better (there are some very, very mature topics in Art History II). Art History I is mostly prehistoric stuff, Egyptian, etc.

But, as already stated, Art History doesn't count as history at most universities.

Unfortunately, he's too young for OnlineDegree. That history course was pretty good, nothing graphic (that I could remember), but there was discussion of war in the abstract.

You could preview the US History courses at Sophia the same as Art History. I don't remember those being violent or whatever, though it's been a while since I took them.

I also don't remember https://ea.asu.edu/courses/global-histor...0-hst-100/ being particularly graphic either. You could take it yourself  for $25, then if it's appropriate he could take it the next time it's offered.

I wonder what you mean by very, very mature topics. Is it nude images? Or psychological stuff like suicide or adultery or stuff like that? Or violent war type topics? I am just curious.


I was not aware that ART-166 (either from SDC or Sophia) would not count for the history requirement at TESU, so we will probably not go that route anyway.

Coopersmith it is. Will first try History of Board Games, which requires a one-page essay on a popular board game to be emailed to them before you even do the exam. I prefer that over the essay type questions that you do within the exam. I will report here how the course goes. If he fails that, the backup plan is history of food trucks or history of ice cream. 

Unfortunately, won't be able to have those evaluated at TESU for a few more years, because he is only 13 years old. As soon as he turns 16, will do the academic evaluation at TESU.

Another thing I will have him do is these statistics.com courses: machine learning with python, python for analytics, network analysis. I wonder if any of those 3 will come in as UL for the TESU Bachelor of Computer Science. We shall see.
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(01-04-2024, 12:44 PM)homeschoolmom1 Wrote: I wonder what you mean by very, very mature topics. Is it nude images? Or psychological stuff like suicide or adultery or stuff like that? Or violent war type topics? I am just curious.

I can't even explain properly because some of the "modern art" topics are so NSFW. There may or may not be a couple of nude pics; it's art, that's expected. No, what I remember is the description of one modern art installation. The "artist" had a boardwalk/wooden sidewalk set up (in an art gallery? I don't remember). Low to the ground. He is under the sidewalk, nude. As people walk over the sidewalk, he is... being intimate with himself. There were a couple more really NSFW ones, but that's the one that still sticks out in my mind.
In progress:
TESU - BA Computer Science; BSBA CIS; ASNSM Math & CS; ASBA

Completed:
Pierpont - AAS BOG
Sophia (so many), The Institutes (old), Study.com (5 courses)
ASU: Human Origins, Astronomy, Intro Health & Wellness, Western Civilization, Computer Appls & Info Technology, Intro Programming
Strayer: CIS175, CIS111, WRK100, MAT210
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Hi I have completed 87 ECTS from Metropolia Degree Programme of Information Technology and have sent the transcript of records to ACEI. I received this as a reply from ACEI : 

  1. Please provide your complete academic history

  2. We evaluate all post-secondary studies in the order completed. We need your studies completed after high school and corresponding fee.

  3. Please provide your official transcripts and diploma/degrees in French and certified English translation.

  4. Please provide your official transcript for Metropolia University of Applied Sciences in French and certified English translation.
If you need assistance with translations, you may contact Language Clarity directly for a translation quote or submit an official translation prepared by a licensed translator. Please note that Language Clarity Translation service is not affiliated with ACEI. 
Complete Official set of translations for all academic documents issued in a language other than English must be translated into English. Translations must be official or original, line-by-line, word-for-word and in the same format as the original-language documents prepared by a licensed translator.
NOTE:
U.S. translations must be done by American Translators Association (ATA) licensed translators. 
Translations prepared outside the U.S. must include the translator’s name, license/registration information and source that granted the license.
Please submit your missing items.

Can anyone who has gone through the process tell me exactly what documents they were required to send to ACEI ?


 
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Ugh, YOOY, that sounds like it was written by someone who doesn't speak English as a first language. Ironic, that (from a credit evaluation service).

I have to say, that I am a bit worried about the part "We need your studies completed after high school". Does that mean that they won't accept credits that are completed before high school graduation? That would be a real bummer for us. Or does it just mean that they need to receive a list of all studies completed after high school graduation (or before high school graduation if at university level)?

The whole response is convoluted and I hope someone here who has gone through the process can chime in. I have to say, I don't look forward to this whole process when we will have to go through it. Has it been ironed out in the last 2-3 years? I doubt it.
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HI homeschoolmom, I think the person who wrote the email is just very confused. I will document the process and let you all know how it goes.
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