Courses/Exams at a Cheaper Price and TESU Admissions Question - Printable Version +- Online Degrees and CLEP and DSST Exam Prep Discussion (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb) +-- Forum: Inactive (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Forum-Inactive) +--- Forum: [ARCHIVE] Excelsior, Thomas Edison, and Charter Oak Specific Discussion (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Forum-ARCHIVE-Excelsior-Thomas-Edison-and-Charter-Oak-Specific-Discussion) +--- Thread: Courses/Exams at a Cheaper Price and TESU Admissions Question (/Thread-Courses-Exams-at-a-Cheaper-Price-and-TESU-Admissions-Question) Pages:
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Courses/Exams at a Cheaper Price and TESU Admissions Question - UnbreakablyDetermined - 09-08-2018 I've got my complete plan on PDF for the TESU BSBA in finance thanks to the generous help of Degree Forum user dfrecore. I've got all of the financial information which is excellent and at a very cheap price and I was informed that there are ways to take the courses/exams for even less money which means I can save even more money and which lowers the standard cost of $100 per course/exam I have on the plan. Can you all please list the ways in which I can make paying for Saylor/SL/Study.com/TECEP/CLEP/DSST/DavarAcademy/Ed4Credit etc. for less money and save as much money as possible? I was thinking of doing 90 credits (I already have 18 credits from CLEP exams which means I will have 108 credits and a remaining 12 credits needed from other sources including the capstone I must take at TESU) worth of Study.com courses applied directly to the finance degree plan because that would be faster for me and I would not have to schedule for exams. Would doing 90 credits from Study.com be very cheap as long as if I finish at the time I plan to finish? Also, I need to know about TESU's admissions. I read TESU's admissions and I know that I don't need to take the SAT or ACT and I need a high school diploma or GED but I was home-schooled and while I did graduate from an accredited private high school for home-schooled students and have a complete High School portfolio (I was accepted into my local community college) along with a high school diploma. Will I have any issues with enrolling in TESU once I get all of my 117 college credits before registering for the final capstone? Please help me out as best as you all can. Thank you! RE: Courses/Exams at a Cheaper Price and TESU Admissions Question - MNomadic - 09-08-2018 You can make Saylor cheaper if you get a librarian(or someone) to agree to proctor you for free CLEP: use modern states vouchers SL: use promo codes Study.com: take more than 2 classes a month All others: keep an eye out for various promotions. RE: Courses/Exams at a Cheaper Price and TESU Admissions Question - Merlin - 09-08-2018 (09-08-2018, 06:36 PM)UnbreakablyDetermined Wrote: . . . TESU probably won't ask for a copy of your HS diploma unless they have reason to believe you have not graduated HS. As I recall there is just a list of conditions that you must accept as part of the application which includes meeting the academic and age requirements (since you must be at least 21 years old to enroll at TESU now.) RE: Courses/Exams at a Cheaper Price and TESU Admissions Question - mudball - 09-08-2018 My son was accepted to TESU and he was homeschooled. To be honest, I can't remember if he had to send in a HS transcript, but all I have is a spreadsheet I made for him. OnlineDegree.com is $9 a course. RE: Courses/Exams at a Cheaper Price and TESU Admissions Question - cookderosa - 09-08-2018 my homeschooled son was accepted into TESU no problem. Also, the archives are an AMAZING resource. Investing a few weeks digging in and just devouring will help you immensely. I think I read them nonstop when I came here years ago, but this kind of degree really is a DIY approach- I know people will help by encouraging you and answering questions, but things like checking a price are really going to fall on you. RE: Courses/Exams at a Cheaper Price and TESU Admissions Question - dfrecore - 09-08-2018 The other thing to keep in mind is that TESU only takes 90cr from a particular provider. So if you take 90cr from study.com, you've maxed out, and you'll have to get the rest from somewhere else. RE: Courses/Exams at a Cheaper Price and TESU Admissions Question - allvia - 09-09-2018 (09-08-2018, 07:16 PM)Merlin Wrote:(09-08-2018, 06:36 PM)UnbreakablyDetermined Wrote: . . . If you are under 21, but over 18, the admissions requirements can be viewed here: https://www.tesu.edu/academics/catalog/undergraduate-admissions-policy Also you will need to take the Cornerstone as well as the Capstone RE: Courses/Exams at a Cheaper Price and TESU Admissions Question - Merlin - 09-09-2018 (09-09-2018, 07:24 AM)allvia Wrote:(09-08-2018, 07:16 PM)Merlin Wrote:(09-08-2018, 06:36 PM)UnbreakablyDetermined Wrote: . . . I assume the OP isn't active military, so the waiver those under 21 but over 18 doesn't really seem important. The restriction is 21+ now for most people. RE: Courses/Exams at a Cheaper Price and TESU Admissions Question - bjcheung77 - 09-09-2018 Quote: Criteria for Admission: From their webpage link that was posted earlier. This sounds like anyone 18-20 can be admitted as long as they have 24 credits from an approved course provider. What I think this means is, you can get a waiver by taking alternative credit courses and transfer in when you have over 24 credits, if this is the case, then complete the majority of the degree requirements then apply for the capstone course. Just make sure to get this sent to TESU and get approval before you complete the capstone. RE: Courses/Exams at a Cheaper Price and TESU Admissions Question - Merlin - 09-09-2018 (09-09-2018, 03:31 PM)bjcheung77 Wrote:Quote: Criteria for Admission: Hmm, that was the old policy. I thought they are not allowing that anymore? We've seen a few students be turned down for being under 21 despite coming in with enough credits to meet the requirement. Which is why a lot of younger students enroll at COSC now. I don't think this really applies anymore... that or it is very subjective. Though maybe it is due to the source of credits? They say 24 credits from an RA university or the student needs ≤ 24 credits from alternate providers PLUS good scores on the accuplacer. I hadn't seen the accuplacer requirement before, so maybe that is the difference. |