07-15-2022, 05:43 AM
(This post was last modified: 07-15-2022, 05:49 AM by indigoshuffle.)
(07-07-2022, 08:57 AM)SCYankee Wrote: My accumulated credits are listed in my sig below.I'm super late to this, but I'll put in my $0.02 and leave it be...
Trying to choose between Thomas Edison and Liberty programs to best apply my existing credits, but cost is the other main factor.
1. Thomas Edison BSBA in Entrepreneurship, with Marketing Cert (can't find the info on the marketing cert, but I remember it from a previous search)
2. Thomas Edison BSBA in General Management with Marketing Cert, and Entrepreneurship Cert (is there an Entrepreneurship Cert?)
3. Liberty BSBA in Entrepreneurship (and a Marketing Cert, if they offer one)
I'm sure I'll have to grab a SDC membership to fill out some of the required courses, especially with TESU. No problem there. And I still need to take the CSM course/s for Quantitative Reasoning.
How would my courses transfer in? What courses would remain for me to complete?
Also, I can't remember all of the fees and costs associated with TESU, and am worried it gets very expensive if there's a per semester fee, or some other cost that recurs every so often. I've never used FAFSA, so it's available to me. Don't remember if this helps with TESU or if there's some issue that prevents it
Main thing with Liberty is that I can transfer in 90 credits, but have to take all additional credits through them. I prefer the study and pass a test method of alt credits, but more importantly, the additional university courses add to cost.
Some folks on this forum are really knowledgeable about this stuff, and like taking the time to figure this out. So I appreciate any help here. This kind of technical stuff is tedious and overwhelming to me.
I'm on vacation and will check for and answer any replies each evening.
Thanks.
If you want a business degree fast and cheap (which your title implies) and basically hassle free, you'd probably want to go with WGU. If your focus is entrepreneurship then a general business degree is fine and you can add a low cost certification later. Your degree is not going to say "entrepreneurship" anyways. Any business degree you do will say the same thing. by the way, just for self knowledge, study dot com has fantastic courses on entrepreneurship, so does the sba dot gov (for free)