05-03-2011, 05:26 AM
(This post was last modified: 05-03-2011, 07:32 AM by emichele20.)
Honestly when you apply you tell them that you want to do the bsba. Once you are enrolled you send an email to enrolled@tesc.com and say that you believe that you have met the requirements for the ASBA and would like to have an evaluation done. Once they add that degree to your profile you can see if everything matches up properly. If it does and all requirements are met you can fill out the grad form and send in the grad fee.
This is what I have personally done and I havent had any problems. I met the requirements for the AAS in Administrative Studies first and was going to go with that degree until I passed my precalc. Now that I have passed the precalc I think that I will be applying for the ASBA.
TESC has been great with letting me move around my credits to where I needed them to be. Sometimes because their system is automated classes do fall in the wrong place but it is as easy as sending an email or calling them to get it corrected.
@ valsacar, I understand that some ppl may feel that getting an associates is pointless but if you have been in college for years, starting a stopping along the way and never earning a degree it matters. I have thought about all of the different schools I have enrolled in and never got a degree and when I think about how long it would of taken me with another school I get ill. When I enrolled with a for profit school which shall remain nameless, they made it so that I could only take two courses at a time, and would then overlap them so they could juice my FA. With them it would have taken me two and a half years to finish my BA. So when I enrolled with TESC the first thing I looked at was the BSBA but then I also looked at the associates degrees too. Being able to earn additional credits in the last few months has allowed me to get my associates and although it may not be a bachelors it is something. At least it feels to me that my entire 10 year journey with school has not been for nothing. It makes more sense to me to get a degree under your belt now if you have the credits than to have nothing at all or have to wait up to four years to see a result. I think that when they created the associates degree it was a way for people to keep motivated. Waiting for four years to see or hold something is quite absurd and down right depressing.
This is what I have personally done and I havent had any problems. I met the requirements for the AAS in Administrative Studies first and was going to go with that degree until I passed my precalc. Now that I have passed the precalc I think that I will be applying for the ASBA.
TESC has been great with letting me move around my credits to where I needed them to be. Sometimes because their system is automated classes do fall in the wrong place but it is as easy as sending an email or calling them to get it corrected.
@ valsacar, I understand that some ppl may feel that getting an associates is pointless but if you have been in college for years, starting a stopping along the way and never earning a degree it matters. I have thought about all of the different schools I have enrolled in and never got a degree and when I think about how long it would of taken me with another school I get ill. When I enrolled with a for profit school which shall remain nameless, they made it so that I could only take two courses at a time, and would then overlap them so they could juice my FA. With them it would have taken me two and a half years to finish my BA. So when I enrolled with TESC the first thing I looked at was the BSBA but then I also looked at the associates degrees too. Being able to earn additional credits in the last few months has allowed me to get my associates and although it may not be a bachelors it is something. At least it feels to me that my entire 10 year journey with school has not been for nothing. It makes more sense to me to get a degree under your belt now if you have the credits than to have nothing at all or have to wait up to four years to see a result. I think that when they created the associates degree it was a way for people to keep motivated. Waiting for four years to see or hold something is quite absurd and down right depressing.
me:
ASBA-TESC-9/2011
BSBA-TESC-6/2012
Awards: Arnold Fletcher Award
MBA-CSU- 5/2014
DBA- undecided
hubby:
A.A.S-TESC-6/2012
BS in Interdisciplinary Studies-Starting Soon
ASBA-TESC-9/2011
BSBA-TESC-6/2012
Awards: Arnold Fletcher Award
MBA-CSU- 5/2014
DBA- undecided
hubby:
A.A.S-TESC-6/2012
BS in Interdisciplinary Studies-Starting Soon