Edriveless!
If you are enrolled in a program, you can transfer in whatever credits TESU accepts. So, let's say that you are working towards a BSBA, you can transfer in a biology course or anything else. So a person can just enroll in a program, never finish and just keep on sending in credits. Or another strategy is to graduate with a bachelor's degree and keep an associate's degree program unfinished. Then just take a cheap TECEP to keep things open. At least that is how I understand it.
I didn't do this because I graduated with a BSBA in accounting and CIS and associate's in math and computer science. I felt that it was worth it to just graduate and lock in all the degrees. I also feel that $400 is a good deal to transcript large amounts of credit.
The transfer credits are not dated on a TESU transcript, so a person can earn a degree and then take classes later and there is no differentiation between alternative credits earned during the degree program or after. Also, TESU does list duplicate courses on the transcript, so if you want someone to see that you really know calculus, you can just take all the ASU earned admission calculus classes and have calculus listed three or four times.
https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Thread-...ranscripts
Post #6 has a copy of what this looks like.
If you are enrolled in a program, you can transfer in whatever credits TESU accepts. So, let's say that you are working towards a BSBA, you can transfer in a biology course or anything else. So a person can just enroll in a program, never finish and just keep on sending in credits. Or another strategy is to graduate with a bachelor's degree and keep an associate's degree program unfinished. Then just take a cheap TECEP to keep things open. At least that is how I understand it.
I didn't do this because I graduated with a BSBA in accounting and CIS and associate's in math and computer science. I felt that it was worth it to just graduate and lock in all the degrees. I also feel that $400 is a good deal to transcript large amounts of credit.
The transfer credits are not dated on a TESU transcript, so a person can earn a degree and then take classes later and there is no differentiation between alternative credits earned during the degree program or after. Also, TESU does list duplicate courses on the transcript, so if you want someone to see that you really know calculus, you can just take all the ASU earned admission calculus classes and have calculus listed three or four times.
https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Thread-...ranscripts
Post #6 has a copy of what this looks like.