12-18-2020, 05:53 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-18-2020, 05:55 PM by BrianFallon.)
(12-18-2020, 05:10 PM)rachel83az Wrote:(12-18-2020, 05:02 PM)BrianFallon Wrote: I wonder how each partner school will note this on their transcript. It sounds an awful lot like old school credit laundering.
The partners are granting credit based on what they believe is an equivalent credit, but there is no guarantee that TESU would accept it and as regional credit.
As I understand TESU’s new policy, it is meant to be 24 hours taken at a RA school. I may be wrong but why would they leave a work around like this?
Before spending the money,I’d want to see how the partners transcript (does it mention TEL?) and know how TESU will accept them.
I’d check with TESU because I think they would likely not consider it “regionally accredited” credit.
Just because a RA school puts something on their transcript does not mean another has to accept it.
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It is not like credit laundering. It is true that TESU does not have to accept ANYTHING in transfer, but this works just like Outlier or Westcott.
If TESU doesn't accept courses from the partner colleges then they shouldn't even accept their own online courses.
If you checK TESU’s database, one of TEL’s partners isnt even listed....
Now it may be that is because no one has transferred yet.
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(12-18-2020, 05:37 PM)innen_oda Wrote: ASU's Earned Admission College Algebra course uses ALEKS, which they've been doing for longer than TEL Learning has been around.
Not sure why now it should suddenly be a problem for universities to recognise self-paced, alternate forms of learning.
How does TESU transcript that ASU College Algebra course?
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