No, you must complete all the requirements specific to a program in terms of courses and credit mandates.
What college classes will have to be taken to get an AA degree in Business Management
To have a Concentration in a particular area, you take as many classes in that area as you can. For example, if you are working on an AA in psychology, you need to take all your core classes, but you also need other classes to satisfy your AA required hours. You would take as many classes as possible that pertain to the concentration.
Astrology classes & AA meetings pal =)(AA meetings in wealthy neighborhoods that is...)
If ALL offspring are Aa, The parents are AA and aa.
Cal Poly does not offer AA degrees.
The AA/AS you get really doesn't matter, but what does matter is that you get your general education classes completed and that they apply to the college where you will transfer to for your BA. All an AA is a general education degree showing you finished 2 years of college.
You should go to a community college for a masters degree for becoming a OTA. This is taking a little while to get.
If the parents are both AA, which results in the cross AA X AA, then the offspring will all be AA. If both parents are AA, resulting in the cross AA X AA, then all offspring will be AA. If BOTH parents are Aa, resulting in the cross Aa X Aa, then the offspring will be 25% AA, 50% Aa, and 25% AA. This is only true if the alleles are not sex-linked.
You can obtain a true-breeding plant by repeatedly self-pollinating a plant that consistently produces offspring with the same characteristics as the parent. This ensures that the desired traits are consistently passed on without variation.
You need to contact the college for a catalog or go online to see their course work. For an AA usually takes 60 units with 3-6 units required in each subject level. You will be taking undergraduate work that is required to graduate. Math, history, literature, science, writing, public speaking, philosophy, English, computers, . Each area generally requires two classes in those areas.
The classes that are required depends on the specific degree type (AA, AS, AAS), and the specific program of study (Major). Each will have requirements particular to themselves.
If you have a high school degree, then you have to apply to colleges that offer a BA in the major of your choice. After you're accepted, you will spend the first year or two working on GURs -- General University Requirements. Those are just your basic classes that cover a wide variety of subjects and make sure that you'll be well-rounded when you leave the school. At some point you'll declare your major -- your school will have a process for doing that -- and possibly your minor if you choose to have one. You'll finish all the classes required for that, apply for graduation, and go on from there. This question is also in the Associates Degree section so I'll cover that too. I got my associates degree first. If you have a GED, many BA programs won't take you unless you get an AA first. Alternately, as a way to save money or simply because it's easier, you can do your AA before taking a BA, which is why I did it. An AA is sometimes known as a transfer degree, and during an AA you will mostly get all of your GURs out of the way. You apply, get in, take your classes, graduate, then apply to a school that has a BA in the major of your choice. When you start up at that school, you should be able to get right into taking classes for your major. Apply for the major, deal with that, graduate as normal. The plus side? You'll only be working on your BA for two years because you'll have spent the first two years getting your AA, hence why it saves money.