10-17-2018, 09:48 AM
(10-16-2018, 12:00 PM)davewill Wrote: The TESU plan looks pretty good to me. I used the comprehensive plan as well. It's important to plan out your schedule so that you get all of your actual online courses inside the comprehensive year. I failed to do so and had to pay extra for my capstone (I didn't realize the capstone didn't have to be the absolute last class, so did my ethics TECEP when I should have started the capstone). There is also a weird quirk that requires you to take (and pay for) one course AFTER the comprehensive year in order to continue enrollment as per credit. You might need that if you don't actually graduate inside the comprehensive year, which is hard to do. Plan on a last TECEP to fill that role. Also know that you can register for classes in the last month and finish them after the comprehensive year ends, so you actually have 14 months to do all the work.
That's actually really interesting. If I pay for just one extra TCEP after my comprehensive tuition ends, I will be able to continue wrapping up final credits from other sources for up to another year, and I will still have no waiver to pay when I graduate?
(10-17-2018, 12:24 AM)dfrecore Wrote: Really, this isn't the best way to go about it. You would actually need to plan out your entire WGU degree first, and then see what CLEP's will satisfy the requirements (there won't be a ton, as WGU doesn't have a lot of GE's in this program, which is where the CLEP's would work). Taking a bunch of CLEP's and then seeing where your chips fall is kind of random. It's not even a great plan for the Big 3.
If I were you, I would actually look at the degrees themselves - TESU vs. WGU - and see which degree you like best. Then, start planning on how you can get THAT degree.
Also, you can call WGU back and see how financial aid works there if you want. That part will probably be helpful.
That makes sense. I did ask about financial aid, it seems to work the same way as TESU, aka, my Pell grant would basically cover most of the tuition, since a year of tuition at WGU is only slightly more than TESU. I'm more concerned, based on the degree outline, and what the advisor said, that the degree will take me at least two years to finish, if not more. Because TESU's offering is a BA with plenty of gen-eds and free electives, while WGU's is a BS with few gen-eds and no free electives, TESU still seems like the obvious choice for completing the degree in the least amount of time. While I would graduate WGU with more field-specific knowledge, I think I'd prefer to graduate faster, though having learned less, but then gain more practical skills through internships and entry-level work experience. Perhaps that's not the best approach?