You can collect all college credit earned from your transcripts and transfer them to a college to complete your degree. Most colleges will accept up to 75% of credits earned.
Most all college and universities will do this. The amount of credits that are transferable will depend on the specific program of study at the four year institution.
No, you still have them. The new college may or may not accept all the credits you earned at the first, but if you go back to the first college, they're still there (though they, in turn, might refuse to accept transfer credits from the new college). If you think there's the slightest possibility you might transfer schools, you should plan ahead and contact both colleges to see what credits will transfer and what will not.
Well, you can collect all the badges- once you collect all of them you can't collect anymore!
Once a character (username) has earned credits for all islands and the Haunted House, there are no other free credit opportunities for that username. You may create a new username, but any credits earned could not be transferred between usernames.
Some of the credits will be transferable. You will need to ask a counsilor at the college if all will be.
It depends on the specifics of the school and the accreditation requirements. In most cases all the credits have to be earned within a certain period of time. I know that for a law degree, you have to complete all the course work within a 5 year period of time.
all military training and schooling has to be reviewed by a college at which time all such schooling and training can be evaluated to determine college credits allowed. I had one military school evaluated at 3 credits and other training evaluated for additional credits.
Cumulative GPA is an average of all grades a student has earned in high school or college. It is calculated by assigning a numerical value to each grade (such as A4, B3, etc.), multiplying that value by the number of credits for the course, adding up all the values, and dividing by the total number of credits.
If you attended a regionally accredited college, the credits are transferable. However, if the credits you completed do not fit in the program of study at another college or university, they will not be accepted. It's not that the credits are not transferable as much as it is there may be no place to use them. Still, how many credits are transferable is always up to the receiving institution. For individuals who are in a transferable program at a two year school, most all credits (between 60 - 64 credits) are typically accepted.If you attended a regionally accredited college, the credits are transferable. However, if the credits you completed do not fit in the program of study at another college or university, they will not be accepted. It's not that the credits are not transferable as much as it is there may be no place to use them. Still, how many credits are transferable is always up to the receiving institution. For individuals who are in a transferable program at a two year school, most all credits (between 60 - 64 credits) are typically accepted.If you attended a regionally accredited college, the credits are transferable. However, if the credits you completed do not fit in the program of study at another college or university, they will not be accepted. It's not that the credits are not transferable as much as it is there may be no place to use them. Still, how many credits are transferable is always up to the receiving institution. For individuals who are in a transferable program at a two year school, most all credits (between 60 - 64 credits) are typically accepted.If you attended a regionally accredited college, the credits are transferable. However, if the credits you completed do not fit in the program of study at another college or university, they will not be accepted. It's not that the credits are not transferable as much as it is there may be no place to use them. Still, how many credits are transferable is always up to the receiving institution. For individuals who are in a transferable program at a two year school, most all credits (between 60 - 64 credits) are typically accepted.If you attended a regionally accredited college, the credits are transferable. However, if the credits you completed do not fit in the program of study at another college or university, they will not be accepted. It's not that the credits are not transferable as much as it is there may be no place to use them. Still, how many credits are transferable is always up to the receiving institution. For individuals who are in a transferable program at a two year school, most all credits (between 60 - 64 credits) are typically accepted.If you attended a regionally accredited college, the credits are transferable. However, if the credits you completed do not fit in the program of study at another college or university, they will not be accepted. It's not that the credits are not transferable as much as it is there may be no place to use them. Still, how many credits are transferable is always up to the receiving institution. For individuals who are in a transferable program at a two year school, most all credits (between 60 - 64 credits) are typically accepted.
A cumulative GPA is the average of all the grades a student has earned in high school or college courses. It is calculated by assigning a numerical value to each grade (such as A4, B3, etc.), multiplying that value by the number of credits for the course, adding up all the results, and then dividing by the total number of credits completed.
Any community college that has a regional accreditation, which most all do.
In general, the academic transcript will indicate the following. * all courses taken semester by semester, to include courses withdrawn from * title of all courses taken and the grades received in all courses * the grade point average (GPA) semester by semester * cumulative GPA * number of credits taken per semester, and cumulative credits (total earned). The total number of credits earned may differ from the total number of credits actually enrolled for. For example, a failure or course a student withdrew from will not be included in the total number of credits earned. * any dismissals or probation * changes in majors