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Zartanasaurus wrote: » Yes. Yes.
EJizzel wrote: » 30 credits is almost a full year in college so you may only have to do an extra 3 years. Your best bet would be to speak to an adviser to check what exactly will transfer. Have you taken any core classes ? ex. English comp, math history etc. Im pretty sure some of these would transfer to a 4 year school and save you even more time.
Hyper-Me wrote: » 12 credits is "Full time" so 30 credits would be 2 1/3 semesters, by the numbers. Truthfully, a "four year degree" is nonexistant. You can either have no life, no job and spend every waking moment studying and shave 15 years off of your life and get a Bachelors in 4 years or you can take a "full time" schedule of 12 hours and get it in 5-6.
BradleyHU wrote: » most 4 yr schools accept up to 60-70 credits from 2 yr schools.
duckyy wrote: » My brochure says 30 credits will transfer.
Hyper-Me wrote: » 12 credits is "Full time" so 30 credits would be 2 1/3 semesters, by the numbers.
Hyper-Me wrote: » Truthfully, a "four year degree" is nonexistant. You can either have no life, no job and spend every waking moment studying and shave 15 years off of your life and get a Bachelors in 4 years
Zartanasaurus wrote: » Most people consider a school year to be two semesters. Since a BS generally requires ~120 credits, you're looking at 30 credits per year. So for people not taking summer classes, that's 15/15. You can do 12/12/6, of course, but that's not the norm I don't think.
OoteR wrote: » It's a no brainer, do the cc first if they guarentee credits.. You'll get an AS degree and end up saving $3k right off the bat.
duckyy wrote: » So, I shouldn't transfer? o.o
importantbrian wrote: » In fact in my opinion that is the value of a community college. Take your core coursework there on the cheap and then get all your in major classes done at the university.
earweed wrote: » I tried going the 4 year route in my younger days and burnt out and dropped out. I would recommend to anyone out there to go to an accreditted CC for the first 2 years and then transfer into a uni. Save money and less chance of burnout. Get your core classes knocked out. If it ends up taking 5-6 years you'll still have a degree, which I don't have, yet. Getting mine through WGU after all these years. BTW don't rack up too much in student loans if you can help it, mine took 10 years to pay off.
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