TESU - ASNSM in Mathematics - Printable Version +- Online Degrees and CLEP and DSST Exam Prep Discussion (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb) +-- Forum: Main Category (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Forum-Main-Category) +--- Forum: General Education-Related Discussion (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Forum-General-Education-Related-Discussion) +--- Thread: TESU - ASNSM in Mathematics (/Thread-TESU-ASNSM-in-Mathematics) Pages:
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TESU - ASNSM in Mathematics - dharmastudios - 07-16-2019 Hello everyone, and thanks in advance for your assistance here! I'm an "adult learner" (makes me feel old) that never finished the degree previously. I'm enrolled at ECPI, starting classes this coming Monday for a mechanical engineering degree, and I'm hoping to concurrently earn what I started out for originally, which is a math degree. I'll take the ASNSM in place of the BS because time and money. I have so many credits from way back that I'm thinking I could probably get it rather quickly from TESU, but here's my questions I've not been able to find an answer to so far. 1) I have 45 credits from Florida Institute of Technology between everything, some of which is 20 year old technology courses that may not transfer 2) I have 10 credits from a community college near where I grew up in world history courses I took to try to get through my degree a little quicker 3) I am in process of 5 CLEP tests to transfer maximum amount of stuff into ECPI and am not averse to taking a lot more. So I'm unable to determine what all counts toward the 16 math electives with TESU. Would physics? Or chemistry? Calc 1 is the main specified requirement for the degree, but can I take the precalc and/or college algebra CLEP tests as well and have that count? RE: TESU - ASNSM in Mathematics - MNomadic - 07-16-2019 "Calc 1 is the main specified requirement for the degree, but can I take the precalc and/or college algebra CLEP tests as well and have that count?" Yes RE: TESU - ASNSM in Mathematics - mysonx3 - 07-16-2019 Any math class will work towards that requirement RE: TESU - ASNSM in Mathematics - allvia - 07-16-2019 According to the TESU / CLEP equivalency you could CLEP out all the math requirements for the ASNSM in Mathematics https://www.tesu.edu/academics/catalog/clep-college-level-exam-program Keep in mind that although the has no Capstone requirement - it does have the TESU required to take with them Cornerstone (SOS-110: Critical Information Literacy) and the residency waiver fee (currently $2800) Do you have any of the UL math courses already that you'd need for a BA in Mathematics? Or a way to gain them through your ECPI program? if so maybe you can get that BA in Mathematics for just an added TESU Capstone (over the ASNSM) - https://www.tesu.edu/heavin/ba/mathematics What brought you to enrolling in ECPI for Mechanical Engineering vs enrolling somewhere else that offers a BA/BS in Mathematics? RE: TESU - ASNSM in Mathematics - armstrongsubero - 07-16-2019 For the cost of the ASNSM you're better off doing the BA in Math. Currently with alt credit you can get: CSM Learn College Algebra Precalc/Trig Geometry Calculus (6 cr) Calc II Discrete Math Linear Algebra Concepts in math and Quantative Literacy Statistics Plus Statistics.com has some courses that may be used for a math degree. I was thinking of doing my degree in math from TESU as its very doable. You'll only need to do capstone; cornerstone, Calc III, History of math and one other UL math course from TESU. RE: TESU - ASNSM in Mathematics - dharmastudios - 07-16-2019 (07-16-2019, 05:39 PM)allvia Wrote: According to the TESU / CLEP equivalency you could CLEP out all the math requirements for the ASNSM in Mathematics It's been a very long road for me, and it's something I've wanted to do forever as well. I want that math degree, but I'm in kind of a messed up situation financially at the moment. I was part of a mass layoff from my former employer and took basically a $60k a year pay cut as a consequence. It was time. Now, I'm in an all or nothing state of mind. (07-16-2019, 06:06 PM)armstrongsubero Wrote: For the cost of the ASNSM you're better off doing the BA in Math. Currently with alt credit you can get:I didn't think it was this doable. Maybe I will go for the BA instead. I'm a couple of months off from doing TESU, having realized that I should get through some of the things with ECPI first. My thoughts were AS Mechanical Engineering from ECPI, concurrent with ASNSM math from TESU, and then take those into the BS for Electrical Engineering at Excelsior, so I have basically a mechatronics degree. It puts me into robotics and the EE focus of power generation, which is right where I want to be. I wad thinking 3 years, roughly, to get 2 AS and 1 BS. RE: TESU - ASNSM in Mathematics - dfrecore - 07-17-2019 I think it's way too expensive to get an AA from TESU - totally not worth it. You're better off just getting a BA somewhere. Also, the EC degree is in Electrical Engineering TECHNOLOGY, not Electrical Engineering. Big difference. RE: TESU - ASNSM in Mathematics - dharmastudios - 07-17-2019 (07-17-2019, 04:34 AM)dfrecore Wrote: I think it's way too expensive to get an AA from TESU - totally not worth it. You're better off just getting a BA somewhere.For where I'm working and what I'm doing, not a big enough difference to matter much. I'm ok with that difference. RE: TESU - ASNSM in Mathematics - dfrecore - 07-17-2019 (07-17-2019, 07:06 AM)dharmastudios Wrote:(07-17-2019, 04:34 AM)dfrecore Wrote: I think it's way too expensive to get an AA from TESU - totally not worth it. You're better off just getting a BA somewhere.For where I'm working and what I'm doing, not a big enough difference to matter much. I'm ok with that difference. I didn't say it wouldn't work for you, I'm just saying that you should call it what it is for clarification purposes. Others will read this thread and think they can get an EE degree when that's not the case. RE: TESU - ASNSM in Mathematics - bjcheung77 - 07-17-2019 Hmm, interesting, just wondering why did you decide on TESU for your ASNSM and Excelsior for BS Electrical Engineering Technology? I would do the following, get all you can done with the ECPI Associates degree first. If you have spare time, work on all the ACE requirements for the ASNSM. However, I would not do the Excelsior BSEET since you can get that at TESU for cheaper, I would recommend continuing onward with the BSEET by transferring everything into TESU. BTW, both EC/TESU have ABET accreditation if that was the reason you wanted the EC option. Actually, I reviewed TESU website, program name is different. BS Electronics Systems Engineering Technology. Link: https://www.tesu.edu/ast/programs/bs/electronics-systems-engineering-technology |