12-23-2019, 12:43 PM
(12-23-2019, 12:27 PM)dfrecore Wrote:Also finance dsst test. In my experience Saylor tests are difficult and more than one answer could be right from my experience. Dssts are more expensive but (again solely from my experience) I found them not too difficult.(12-22-2019, 02:14 AM)zebra cow Wrote:(12-21-2019, 02:30 AM)dfrecore Wrote: In looking at your eval, I would consider switching to Finance as your AOS, you already have 3 UL FIN courses, and 5 UL ECON courses, which work in FIN. I would always opt for a more specialized concentration if that's an option, and it certainly is for you. If you wanted to add it on and have 2 concentrations, then you could, but Finance is much better than General Management (to do so, you'd need to take another FIN course, or ACCT).Okay just a couple questions:
I also can't imagine spending the time and money to take 16cr at TESU, when you already have all of your AOS completed. It would feel...lame to take those LL GE courses, when you can just easily test out of them. Just my 2c, I maybe have more money than time, so that would be what I would do.
1) What would the process be for me to notify TESU that I would like a concentration in finance? I previously applied with a concentration in management.
2) To major in finance would all of my coursework be the same? One finance class plus whatever is missing from my eval? In your opinion would it change in anyway?
1) I don't know, I'd call.
2) If you're just switching the AOS, everything else is the same (GE, Core, Free Electives). If you're not adding Finance, but just switching it, you already have 6 courses that will work, so you don't lose anything.
----------------
Since you've taken so many FIN/ECON courses, Saylor's Principles of Finance may be really easy for you to pass. I'd think about taking it without even studying. $25 (or maybe less now). CLEP has Prin of Marketing, Computer Applications, American Gov't, College Algebra. All free through Modern States.