08-05-2024, 05:36 PM
(08-05-2024, 05:02 PM)Stonybeach Wrote:No, like I said, laundering is getting something put on a transcript as academic credit in an attempt to use it as at an institution that would not normally accept it for academic credit.(08-05-2024, 04:28 PM)wow Wrote: It looks like you are trying to launder credits. In other words, you want to have one RA college that accepts your EMT courses as undergraduate credits to add them to their transcript, and then you want to use that transcript to have those same credits accepted at an RA institution that would not otherwise accept the courses for academic credit. Is that correct?
If so, that's not possible.
On the other hand, if you are trying to compile multiple sources of alternative credit into a transcript for career purposes (for example, this is sometimes needed by police officers seeking promotion or who need to prove that they took a certain number of courses in a study area), then TESU's ILA service or Excelsior's OneTranscript are what you need. Excelsior's service is even more expensive, at $495.
I want the credits posted on a transcript before the EMT certification expires. I don't plan on renewing the certification and want it on a transcript in case it can be used as "free elective credits" or to document the previous training for what it is worth. I never received previous college credit for the national certification, if that is what you mean by laundering.
For any school that would accept them as academic credits, you'll just have to submit the documentation at the time you apply to that school. Some may grant credit because you took the courses, even if the EMT certification itself is expired. Others may not. If you're thinking about TESU, it's not clear to me that TESU requires the certification to be current. Someone else on this board may know more-- i've never taken emt courses and haven't tried to get credit for them. https://www2.tesu.edu/oplr/client.php?client=NREMT