04-09-2019, 01:17 PM
(This post was last modified: 04-09-2019, 01:19 PM by saraholson.)
(04-09-2019, 01:06 PM)bjcheung77 Wrote: Ah, yes. TESU is correct on this one, your "Business 104" class should be placed into the Business Core requirements as a course is required in that field (unless of course, you already have another class for it, then this will go into your free electives). You can take an additional course, such as the one I recommended, the Operating Systems in 1 day - it's that awesome of a course. I'll break it down for you again - exactly as my original post.thanks - that makes it very clear. I only have one more question now actually - I need one more Gen Ed credit. Can I use the following course from Study since it comes into TESU as CIS - or is it considered a 'business' course and therefore ineligible for gen ed area? to be clear - for the 'intro to computers' requirement that is required in all business degrees - i used Study's Business 109 and that requirement is already met (comes in as TESU COS-101 : Introduction to Computers)
You just need one LL programming course and can choose from a couple of the UL courses.
Required: Pick 1 - COS-213 Programming C++ or COS-116 C Programming (Study.com LL)
Required: CIS-320 Information Systems Analysis and Design (Study.com UL)
Recommended LL - COS-240 Introduction to Operating Systems (Study.com LL)
Recommended UL - MAR-441 Digital Marketing & Advertising (Study.com UL)
You choose any two of the following three courses: CIS-311 Database Management (Study.com UL)
COS-330 Computer Architecture or CIS-301 Management Info Systems (Study.com UL)
All in all, pre-plan, review your spreadsheet and degree requirements, then verify all courses are properly allocated. Post your spreadsheet here for review, either myself or another member can comment on it!
Study.com Business 104: Information Systems and Computer Applications / Tesu Name: CIS-103 : Intro to Computer Info Systems - LL
I thought i may be able to use it since CIS 103 and COS 101 are not the same at TESU