I don't know this thread seems like a waste of time:
1. It isn't practical to use 90 credits from study.com (or anyone source). Due to cost, study.com monthly limits and more. If there is anything you already know a ton about one and done methods like clep might be more efficient. 90 study.com credits seems really innfiencent and a pain. Also a lot of people here have prior credits and dont even need 90 credits to finish.
2. Earning a second tesu degree is not usually recommended. If OP wants to earn two tesu degrees it is a better idea to earn them both at once to avoid paying two waiver fees. Also the new credits must be earned after the 1st degree is conferred so it puts you in a weird spot for a few months where you cant earn credit, not the fastest option.
3. Too many people come on here asking about two degrees when they haven't even earned one. I myself was in this place one. To all the newbies, just start by working on one degree. You can add a second degree later. But doing all this planning towards multiple degrees is taking away time you could be working towards one. Two degrees does not equal double the success.
Tesu might not even have an answer. Seems not common that someone would earn 90 credits from one source and then go back to earn a second degree. If this actually might apply to you, I'd ask tesu once you have started your journey.
But I recommend either doing two degrees at once or doing one tesu degree and then a masters. Going back for a 2nd tesu degree is not the cheapest or quickest path.
1. It isn't practical to use 90 credits from study.com (or anyone source). Due to cost, study.com monthly limits and more. If there is anything you already know a ton about one and done methods like clep might be more efficient. 90 study.com credits seems really innfiencent and a pain. Also a lot of people here have prior credits and dont even need 90 credits to finish.
2. Earning a second tesu degree is not usually recommended. If OP wants to earn two tesu degrees it is a better idea to earn them both at once to avoid paying two waiver fees. Also the new credits must be earned after the 1st degree is conferred so it puts you in a weird spot for a few months where you cant earn credit, not the fastest option.
3. Too many people come on here asking about two degrees when they haven't even earned one. I myself was in this place one. To all the newbies, just start by working on one degree. You can add a second degree later. But doing all this planning towards multiple degrees is taking away time you could be working towards one. Two degrees does not equal double the success.
Tesu might not even have an answer. Seems not common that someone would earn 90 credits from one source and then go back to earn a second degree. If this actually might apply to you, I'd ask tesu once you have started your journey.
But I recommend either doing two degrees at once or doing one tesu degree and then a masters. Going back for a 2nd tesu degree is not the cheapest or quickest path.