I looked up the school you said in the ACE registrary. It isn't there at all.
However, it is an NCCRS member.
http://www.nationalccrs.org/colleges-uni...University
Be careful, make sure the courses are NCCRS approved and not just ACE approved. Some courses approved for credit for both, so it wouldn't matter.
Here is a guide.
Yes NCCRS approved: Saylor, Study.com, Coopersmith, Davar, Study.com, and onlinedegree.com (which is great but you need to graduate high school to use the site)
Not NCCRS approved: StraighterLine, Shoomp, Sophia
Check this page for NCCRS approved TESU courses:
https://study.com/academy/college-accele...tters.html
My suggestion (you don't have to follow it, but these are my thoughts)
Don't do any of those things sites I mentioned above at all. Instead focus on CLEP, DSST, and AP tests. NCCRS credit would be risky and a nightmare to deal with in terms of transferring it in. It might not even work. As long as they accept them and have spelled out equivalencies, CLEP, DSST, AP are guaranteed to work without guesswork.
If I were you I'd focus on CLEP and AP (use modernstates) for as many requirements as possible. They would literally be free and CLEP and AP are the most widely accepted at any school. You are young and if you change your mind about where you want to go to school, these credits will likely transfer to most places. Go to the college and see if you get can a printed guide of equivalency credit for CLEP, DSST, and AP. The website doesn't have a guide as far as I can see. But if they accept them there has to be an exact guide somewhere in the counseling department you will just have to ask, maybe multiple people even, but you can get it. Then from there, you can map out a degree plan and dual enroll in coursework the exams don't cover.
However, it is an NCCRS member.
http://www.nationalccrs.org/colleges-uni...University
Be careful, make sure the courses are NCCRS approved and not just ACE approved. Some courses approved for credit for both, so it wouldn't matter.
Here is a guide.
Yes NCCRS approved: Saylor, Study.com, Coopersmith, Davar, Study.com, and onlinedegree.com (which is great but you need to graduate high school to use the site)
Not NCCRS approved: StraighterLine, Shoomp, Sophia
Check this page for NCCRS approved TESU courses:
https://study.com/academy/college-accele...tters.html
My suggestion (you don't have to follow it, but these are my thoughts)
Don't do any of those things sites I mentioned above at all. Instead focus on CLEP, DSST, and AP tests. NCCRS credit would be risky and a nightmare to deal with in terms of transferring it in. It might not even work. As long as they accept them and have spelled out equivalencies, CLEP, DSST, AP are guaranteed to work without guesswork.
If I were you I'd focus on CLEP and AP (use modernstates) for as many requirements as possible. They would literally be free and CLEP and AP are the most widely accepted at any school. You are young and if you change your mind about where you want to go to school, these credits will likely transfer to most places. Go to the college and see if you get can a printed guide of equivalency credit for CLEP, DSST, and AP. The website doesn't have a guide as far as I can see. But if they accept them there has to be an exact guide somewhere in the counseling department you will just have to ask, maybe multiple people even, but you can get it. Then from there, you can map out a degree plan and dual enroll in coursework the exams don't cover.


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