Online Degrees and CLEP and DSST Exam Prep Discussion
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+- Online Degrees and CLEP and DSST Exam Prep Discussion (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb)
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New to Credit by Exam - Back2College2014 - 10-28-2014

Hi everyone.

I've been reading and researching this new-found (for me, at least) credit by exam method of getting a college degree and found my way through the maze most of the way, however. The wall I keep running into is how to navigate the CLEP/DANTES/TESC exams and align them with the requirements of the desired degree from the college chosen, hopefully not to waste time on unnecessary or untransferable exams? I'm sure I'll have a big "duh!" moment once someone answers this question, but until then, how do you "veterans" do it?

I'm shooting for a BA in Psychology, I have 19 credits from a community college, and need 101 more credit. I still haven't decided, yet, between Excelsior and Thomas Edison. They both have pros and cons, however, I'm looking for the quickest route to my BA.

One more question I have is whether I can take CLEP exams w/out assigning any college as the recipient of the exam score? Can I have my CLEP scores/credit transferred to another college in the future (if I change colleges)?


New to Credit by Exam - sanantone - 10-28-2014

For psychology, TESC and Excelsior will be close in speed of completion. TESC will be the cheaper option using the Per Credit Tuition Plan. Just make sure you include 7 TECEPs to meet the residency requirements for this tuition plan, and you'll be good to go.

Sanantone's General Education Options - Degree Forum Wiki
Sanantone's BA in Psychology - Degree Forum Wiki


New to Credit by Exam - cookderosa - 10-28-2014

]Hi everyone. hi! Welcome to the board!

I've been reading and researching this new-found (for me, at least) credit by exam method of getting a college degree and found my way through the maze most of the way, however. The wall I keep running into is how to navigate the CLEP/DANTES/TESC exams and align them with the requirements of the desired degree from the college chosen, hopefully not to waste time on unnecessary or untransferable exams? That's the bottom line. Most schools, including Thomas Edison and Excelsior have charts that show the equivalences.

I'm sure I'll have a big "duh!" moment once someone answers this question, but until then, how do you "veterans" do it? Use the charts.

I'm shooting for a BA in Psychology, I have 19 credits from a community college, and need 101 more credit. I still haven't decided, yet, between Excelsior and Thomas Edison. They both have pros and cons, however, I'm looking for the quickest route to my BA.

One more question I have is whether I can take CLEP exams w/out assigning any college as the recipient of the exam score?
Of course! You don't need to pick a college yet either. You can take an exam or two to get your feet wet. When you take the exam and it asks you to id a college, just leave it blank and move on. When you're ready, you'll pay 1 fee for a transcript to CLEP and 1 fee for a transcript to DSST and they will have alllllll of your passing scores on them! Easy and cheap. About $40 if memory serves me.

Can I have my CLEP scores/credit transferred to another college in the future (if I change colleges)? Yes, and that will probably be required. Anytime you go anywhere (except unless you go back to your CC) you'll have to send official transcripts from all your credit sources. So, one from the CC, one from CLEP, one from DSST, and any others you accumulate. Keep in mind the costs associated with having many transcripts (I have 7) so every time you do this, you have to spend some money. This may happen in the future for grad school, certain employers, etc. A round of mine runs me about $130. Adds up. So, when you price shop for credit on the front end of your degree, just kinda keep it in the back of your mind that streamlining your credit from fewer sources can save some money.

Here is the link to TESC's charts. You'll pan down and click on the brand you want (CLEP, DSST, etc.) and the full table will open up. Exam Programs

Excelsior College | National exams for credit


New to Credit by Exam - UptonSinclair - 10-28-2014

Most of us veterans have an idea where stuff fits from experience. There are couple of documents that will help you get an understanding of what fits into the various sections of the degrees.

Excelsior - https://my.excelsior.edu/documents/78666/102207/Using_Exams_to_Complete_Your_Excelsior_College_Degree.pdf/969eaa1d-b672-4eaf-8576-f3afcce7119e

TESC - General Education Courses

It is a bit overwhelming at first, but you will get more comfortable with it over time.


New to Credit by Exam - laughter - 10-29-2014

Back2College2014 Wrote:The wall I keep running into is how to navigate the CLEP/DANTES/TESC exams and align them with the requirements of the desired degree from the college chosen, hopefully not to waste time on unnecessary or untransferable exams?
If you're aiming for TESC or Excelsior, select from the degree plans below. Use Sanantone and UptonSinclair's lists to select the courses/exams you wish to fit into your degree plan. Post your degree plan here and get feedback. Smile
Thomas Edison State College: Psychology
https://my.excelsior.edu/documents/78666/292073/SLA+BA+Psychology+degree+chart/896c6c9b-87c4-4930-a338-7d5c3d27eed0
https://my.excelsior.edu/documents/78666/292073/SLA+BS+Psychology+degree+chart/89a91725-da37-4205-8517-a8b5b6b43e7b

Quote:I'm shooting for a BA in Psychology, I have 19 credits from a community college, and need 101 more credit. I still haven't decided, yet, between Excelsior and Thomas Edison. They both have pros and cons, however, I'm looking for the quickest route to my BA.
If you're looking for quick, I think TESC will offer you the most flexibility. You don't have to decide immediately though... take a couple tests (that will transfer to either colleges) then decide which would work better for you. You could also make degree plans for each then compare them.

Btw, *highfives* from a fellow psychology major! Smile Best wishes as you begin this journey of CBEs. Keep asking questions and reading the threads here... you'll soon find that you understand very well how this whole thing works. Smile


New to Credit by Exam - GoodYellowDogs - 10-29-2014

Just a reminder that until you actually enroll, the requirements for the degree can change.

I enrolled at Excelsior when you could completely test out, use a subject GRE for 30 units of credit, only needed one math class, didn't need a capstone, etc. Now that has all changed. So, if you are wanting to use a specific set of requirements at a specific college, then enroll while you can get those requirements.


New to Credit by Exam - EI2HCB - 10-29-2014

Absolutely crucial information above. Requirements change all the time which is one reason why I enrolled before taking CLEP tests. If you take a long time to complete your degree you may end up paying for residency classes or yearly fees. Once you have 12 credits in the bag at Excelsior there isn't any further yearly fees unless you are enrolling under the exam only policy. You are smarter to enroll under a residency requirement and start gaining credits through exam and paying the difference once it comes time to graduate if you used almost exclusively CBE credit. You still need the Capstone 3 credits and the INL 1 credit in addition to all your CBE credit. 8 more credits means you can take your time under your enrollment to gather those credits if need be.


New to Credit by Exam - sanantone - 10-29-2014

That's the beauty of the Per Credit Tuition Plan at TESC. All you need to do is take one TECEP per year at $111 to stay enrolled. You can always switch tuition plans later.


New to Credit by Exam - EI2HCB - 10-29-2014

sanantone Wrote:That's the beauty of the Per Credit Tuition Plan at TESC. All you need to do is take one TECEP per year at $111 to stay enrolled. You can always switch tuition plans later.

Sanantone,

That is indeed beautiful! TESC seems to outshine in recent times regarding their enrollment procedure and residency requirements. I'm almost a bit jealous Smile


New to Credit by Exam - learflyer - 10-30-2014

sanantone Wrote:That's the beauty of the Per Credit Tuition Plan at TESC. All you need to do is take one TECEP per year at $111 to stay enrolled. You can always switch tuition plans later.

What is the initialenrollment fee at TESC? I'm at Excelsior currently and trying to come up with the $1000 to "stay" enrolled. Sad

May be time to switch...