1. Not me, sorry. Someone else will speak up.
2. See above.
3. For law, Psychology or Sociology and Economics.
4. Psychology and Business comes close. You would still have capstones at EC. Sociology and Economics you would not be able to test out of much at all, but I mention it because it is well-rounded (and you seem pretty motivated
). There would be both math and a lot of writing. Psychology you can test out of most of(as you no doubt know). If you want to maximize testing out, you reduce your choice of majors, because there simply aren't that many exams. Testing out may not be the way to impress others with your well-roundedness, tough to say.
5. EC gives letter grades for some DSSTs (see the student guide to credit by examination: any DSST with a 2-digit score gets a letter grade). No letter grades for CLEP at EC.
At EC you can do 2 "depths" within a single major, and that might give you "well-rounded" but be quicker.
I hear for what it's worth that there are way more law school grads than there are jobs for them. You might want to check into that. On the other hand, Peter Senge writes that best the time to go into a degree program is when people are talking about the surplus of grads -- because the surplus means fewer will enroll and the resulting shortage will create an opportunity for those who ignored warnings like mine.
Phillip
2. See above.
3. For law, Psychology or Sociology and Economics.
4. Psychology and Business comes close. You would still have capstones at EC. Sociology and Economics you would not be able to test out of much at all, but I mention it because it is well-rounded (and you seem pretty motivated
). There would be both math and a lot of writing. Psychology you can test out of most of(as you no doubt know). If you want to maximize testing out, you reduce your choice of majors, because there simply aren't that many exams. Testing out may not be the way to impress others with your well-roundedness, tough to say. 5. EC gives letter grades for some DSSTs (see the student guide to credit by examination: any DSST with a 2-digit score gets a letter grade). No letter grades for CLEP at EC.
At EC you can do 2 "depths" within a single major, and that might give you "well-rounded" but be quicker.
I hear for what it's worth that there are way more law school grads than there are jobs for them. You might want to check into that. On the other hand, Peter Senge writes that best the time to go into a degree program is when people are talking about the surplus of grads -- because the surplus means fewer will enroll and the resulting shortage will create an opportunity for those who ignored warnings like mine.
Phillip
CLEP Principles of Management 77
CLEP Intro to Sociology 74
CLEP Principles of Marketing 78
CLEP Information Systems and Computer Applications 75
CLEP Intro to Psychology 80
CLEP Intro Business Law 72
CLEP Principles of Macroeconomics 73
CLEP A & I Lit 75
CLEP Principles of Microeconomics 72
CLEP Financial Accounting 62
DSST Ethics in America 468
DSST MIS 482
CLEP Natural Science 72
DSST Org Behavior 80
DSST Finance 462
CLEP Intro to Sociology 74
CLEP Principles of Marketing 78
CLEP Information Systems and Computer Applications 75
CLEP Intro to Psychology 80
CLEP Intro Business Law 72
CLEP Principles of Macroeconomics 73
CLEP A & I Lit 75
CLEP Principles of Microeconomics 72
CLEP Financial Accounting 62
DSST Ethics in America 468
DSST MIS 482
CLEP Natural Science 72
DSST Org Behavior 80
DSST Finance 462


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