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Help please
#11
Financial Accounting and Managerial Accounting are basic math concepts. As long as you are alright with Adding, Subtracting and a few small formulas here and there you shouldn't have any issues with these courses. From what I remember Financial Accounting had Ratio Formulas such as Current Assets/Current Liabilities. Not the harder part here is remembering what Current Assets are and Current Liabilities are rather then the math of the formula.
Thomas Edison State University - BSBA: Accounting - September 2017

B&M: Stats, Business Law I, Microeconomics, Business Comm, Computer Concepts and Apps, Financial Accounting, Intermediate Accounting II, Managerial Accounting, Not-for-Profit Accounting
CLEP: Sociology, Psychology, Marketing, College Comp Modular, Human Growth and Development
Institutes: Ethics 312
Aleks: Intermediate Algebra, College Algebra, PreCalculus
Shmoop: U.S. History I, U.S. History II, Modern European History
Study.com: Principles of Finance, Advanced Accounting I, Applied Managerial Accounting, American Government, Macroeconomics, Principles of Management, Globalization and International Management, English Composition II, Intro to Computing, Public Speaking, Info Systems and Comp Apps
SL: Intermediate Accounting I, Introduction to Religon, Cost Accounting, Western Civilization I/II
TECEP: Strategic Management, Federal Income Tax
#12
dfrecore Wrote:Just a quick note cookderosa - I didn't think Financial or Managerial accounting classes were very math-y at all. Financial especially was addition and subtraction stuff. Really simple. Managerial (And the Finance course) got more complicated with some formulas for figuring out bonds and whatnot, but I still wouldn't say that you had to be particularly good at math to understand the concepts or pass the courses. Just an FYI - I'm still struggling through Stats! :-P

This is good to know. My son is finishing up the last of his non-math related courses, taking a break, and then he needs to tackle accounting, managerial accounting, statistics, and business statistics as his final courses to transfer to WGU. He's dreading stats, but at least I can reassure him that accounting won't be too terrible. As of right now he's planning on both accounting courses via SL and stats at Study.com, after he takes a month or so break once he completes Project Management next Monday.
Here Researching for my son, who has done the following:
Community College: Intro to Philosophy, Fundamentals of IT, English Comp 1
Saylor: Intro to Business, Principles of  Marketing, Corporate Communication
Shmoop: US History 2 (WGU won't accept this)
ALEKS: Int. Algebra, College Algebra
Study.com: Personal Finance, Principles of Finance, HR Management, Global Business, Advanced Operations Management
Straighterline: US History 2, Environmental Science, US History, Microeconomics, Macroeconomics, English Comp 2, Principles of Management, Business Law, Business Ethics, Psychology, Organizational Behavior, Accounting 1,Communication, Managerial Accounting, Statistics
Ed4Credit: Managing Information Systems
Sophia: Project Management
WGU: Bachelors in HR Management 

Second son is currently attending Penn Foster for his high school diploma, then on to Ashworth for An Associates in Criminal Justice
#13
Why no love for stats? I was so happy to be in a math class that meant something. Algebra....solve for x, what is x,why should I care?
But stats is hooked to real things, like geometry is.
Only time algebra made sense to me was when I took Chem...oh! so we're using math to figure out what the solute is. Why wasn't algebra taught using examples like this?
*grumble* solve for some fairly tale thing....hated algebra.....
-Dina
DBA - researching options currently (if you have any wisdom to share, please do!)
MBA - Management & Strategy, WGU, July 2016
BSBA - Operations Management, TESU, Sept. 2015
AAS - Dietetic Technology, Middlesex County College, May 1999
#14
cookderosa Wrote:(we use both in our home because my teens are doing Straighterline classes for homeschool this semester, but otherwise I wouldn't bother)

Hi there! You shared that you have two homeschooled students using online courses this semester. Study.com has been looking to expand our offering to high school students. We're looking for students to take part in a pilot program where they would take online high school courses that are ACE recommended. These courses can be used to fulfill both high school and college general education requirements. If you're interested in participating, please send us a private message so we can pass along more info!

-The Study.com Team
#15
Study.com Wrote:Hi there! You shared that you have two homeschooled students using online courses this semester. Study.com has been looking to expand our offering to high school students. We're looking for students to take part in a pilot program where they would take online high school courses that are ACE recommended. These courses can be used to fulfill both high school and college general education requirements. If you're interested in participating, please send us a private message so we can pass along more info!

-The Study.com Team

Thanks for the offer, but I'm going to pass. No disrespect, but I'm familiar with Study products, and they aren't a good fit for our homeschool.

If you would like a suggestion, there is an unmet population. Last data I read shows 62% of homeshoolers do so for religious reasons. Currently, Lumerit (College Plus) is the only provider of Christian-worldview-based ACE evaluated courses, and they do not allow a la carte enrollment - in other words, they are exceptionally expensive and require enrollment in a full program. They now also bought SpeedyPrep and are the "only" fish in that pond. They could use some competition IMO.
#16
cookderosa Wrote:Thanks for the offer, but I'm going to pass. No disrespect, but I'm familiar with Study products, and they aren't a good fit for our homeschool.

If you would like a suggestion, there is an unmet population. Last data I read shows 62% of homeshoolers do so for religious reasons. Currently, Lumerit (College Plus) is the only provider of Christian-worldview-based ACE evaluated courses, and they do not allow a la carte enrollment - in other words, they are exceptionally expensive and require enrollment in a full program. They now also bought SpeedyPrep and are the "only" fish in that pond. They could use some competition IMO.

That is a great suggestion!

And if I can add a thought, any Christian-Worldview course competition would best be written/taught by individuals who themselves have a strong Christian-Worldview. Both SL's and Study.com's mention(s) of Evangelical Christianity that I have seen were off base from what any Christian I know would believe, and obviously written by someone who didn't understand or agree with the foundation behind the lesson they were teaching.
BA.SS: TESU '17
AA.LS, with Honors: CC '16
CHW Certification: CC '15
ΦΘΚ, Alumna Member

"It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop."― Confucius



B&M University: '92-'95
CC: '95-'16
CLEP: A&I Lit; '08
DSST: HTYH; '08
FEMA: unusable at TESU
IIA: Ethics & CPCU; '15
Kaplan: PLA course; '14,
NFA: 2 CR; '15
SOPHIA: Intro Soc; '15
Straighterline: US History II, Intro Religion, Bus. Ethics, Prin. Mgmt, Cult. Anthro, Org Behavior, American Gov't, Bus. Comm; '15
Study.com: Social Psych, Hist of Vietnam, Abnorm Psych, Research Methods in Psych, Classroom Mgmt, Ed Psych; '16
TECEP: Psych of Women, Tech Writing, Med Term, Nutrition, Eng Comp I; '16
TESU: BA.SS Capstone course; '16

Ended with a total of 170 undergrad credits (plus lots of CEUs). My "I'm finally done" thread


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