08-25-2020, 03:26 PM
With that many alt-credits, the school that would take the most would likely be TESU. If your work is paying for a degree, you can spend that $5200/year on TESU credits, avoid the tuition waiver, and graduate fairly quickly. $5200 would be about 10 credits and you need 16 to avoid the waiver. Depending on exactly how education reimbursement works (is it per calendar year or per 12 months?) with your employer, you could easily graduate by next December at little/no cost to you.
EC is harder to plan for because they aren't as transparent and they don't accept as many transfer courses as TESU does.
WGU only brings in a max of 90 transfer credits so you'd still have to complete 30 with them. It's completely doable, with that many credits, to graduate in only one term so that's definitely something to consider.
Personally, I would probably apply to both TESU and WGU, see which one works best as far as credits brought in, and go from there.
EC is harder to plan for because they aren't as transparent and they don't accept as many transfer courses as TESU does.
WGU only brings in a max of 90 transfer credits so you'd still have to complete 30 with them. It's completely doable, with that many credits, to graduate in only one term so that's definitely something to consider.
Personally, I would probably apply to both TESU and WGU, see which one works best as far as credits brought in, and go from there.