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#1 |
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Member
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Last edited by happy20003; 11-10-2010 at 09:50 PM. Reason: old |
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#2 |
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Senior Member
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If I were you I would check and see if you could transfer your credits to another university and try to obtain a bio degree of some kind. If schools don't recognize your degree maybe they would recognize some of your classes. That could really cut down on the classes you need to take.
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#3 |
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Last edited by happy20003; 11-10-2010 at 09:50 PM. Reason: old |
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#4 |
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Grizzled Old Newcomer
Join Date: May 2003
Posts: 1,520
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Schools in Arizona need to be accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools, in order for their credits to transfer (usually). Sorry but there is no other way around it; you attended a school that is not accredited the way other schools need it to be, for whatever reason.
__________________
Education wasn't fun/ But now that school is done/ Higher learning's just begun... -Auer and Stringfellow |
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#5 | |
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New Member
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 2
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UAT, as of now, is in the process of becoming NCA (North Central Association of Colleges and Schools) accredited. The process takes from three to seven years and once it is complete, then UAT degrees will be accepted by the likes of ASU and U of A. As it stands now, UAT is three years into the process and if all goes really well, in two years, it will be done. The main thing involved is time.
Here is something to think upon. Did you know ASU is one of the hardest schools to transfer credits into? ASU Main campus is known not to accept credits from the ASU West campus and that is fact. Also I knew of someone who transfered from Penn State and could not get a third of his classes to transfer. Now I am not aware of the policies of Midwestern but it seems non NCA credits are going to be hard to bring in to any insitution across the board. The only two suggestions I would follow, if I were doing the same as you, are to start over in a community college or two year school and see if they might be more laxed on transfer credits and obtain the core requirements or wait out the time needed for your degree or classes from UAT to be recognized as NCA quality. If time and age is a concern for you, my girlfriend's older brother is going to college to become a physician and he is in his forties. So time is not a huge concern. It is more about desire. In the end, anything worth having is worth working for, no matter how long it takes and what you have to go through to get it. P.S. If you have a degree, then you are part of the 20% club that actually graduates college. With that degree you could work with a decent salary while NCA accredition processes. Again just a thought. Quote:
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#6 |
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EX-TER-MIN-ATE!'
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Unfortunately it gets more complicated.
Since the poster graduated from UAT at the time that it wasn't accredited by North Central Association, her courses and degree won't be recognize by other regionally accredited schools even if UAT ultimately gets accredited by NCA. The same holds true for the opposite situation. If the poster graduated from School X, and School X was accredited by NCA at the time that the poster graduated BUT later loses accreditation status, the courseworks and degree are still recognized as coming from an accredited institution. So having the poster wait till NCA accredits UAT won't help him/her since the poster graduated when it wasn't accredited by NCA. An analogy if this concept is confusing. MD schools in the US must be LCME accredited. If it is not LCME accredited, then its graduates cannot get licensed. Let's say Med School B opens and takes students (before LCME accreditation). Their first class graduated in 2009. Med School B finally gets accreditation in 2010. Graduates from 2009 are not eligible to be licensed since they graduated from an unaccredited school. Graduates from 2010 CAN be licensed since they graduated from an LCME accredited school. This situation ALMOST happened with regards to FSU but fortunately they got LCME accreditation before their first class graduated. Welcome to the wacky world of higher education and federal type of government. P.S. There is always the possibility that the transfer school MIGHT not check the date of accreditation and compare it to the date of graduation. What is the worse case scenerio? Well, the WORSE (worse of the worse) case is the school will later find out that the credits were transferred incorrectly and withdraw credits (even if you graduated). Taking away credits might mean you no longer satisfy the requiresments for a degree, so the degree can be rescinded. Now this is all hypothetical and I know of NO example of this actually happening, but it could (depending on the school, its by-laws and procedures for due-process) |
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#7 |
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New Member
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 2
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I hope this might help put your mind at ease. UAT is possibly 3 years away from the NCA certification. While there is no "Grandfather Clause" or retroactive degree changes, the institution can set its own rules in a sense. This simply means that say you graduate or have already graduated and the university becomes NCA accredited after the fact, the university will send out a mass notice to all former students and to return to re-enroll and they will transfer in all credits and re-issue a NCA degree (They did the same thing when they changed their name a couple of years back). But there is a catch, as the always is. You would have to respond as quickly as possible and depending on the courses you took hope that they have not changed so dramaticly that you have to take them over. Otherwise you will have a NCA degree. I hope this might bring at least a smirk to your face.
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#8 |
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EX-TER-MIN-ATE!'
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This last post is suspect at best.
First - the "limited time only" offer Second, re-awarding degrees for alumni to by-pass that pesky accreditation process - in effect, misrepresenting the work done as being done by an accredited NCA institution (maybe fraud) Third - awarding degrees with virtually no additional work will be viewed by those in academia as highly suspect and aid in the perception that the institution is a diploma mill Fourth - it might actually violate rules and policies as set forth by either NCA, the state in which the school operates, OR the US Dept of Education (resulting in probation, loss of accreditation, loss of state charter to operate, or worse) Accreditation is important because it sets standards and allows employers and other education institutions to trust the work done by accredited institutions. To simply by-pass this by re-awarding a diploma will not solve the accreditation problem but create new problems (new graduates will have their degree questioned as to whether they really graduated at the time that the institution was accredited) Institutions (whether public or private) can choose to accept OR reject credits from other instutitions, accredited or not (Penn State /ASU mentioned earlier is a good example). If it is known that UAT re-issued degrees to its alumni who graduated before accreditation, then schools will still treat the coursework as being from an "unaccredited" institution. The sad truth is that the OP went to a non-NCA accredited institution and graduated from it. There is nothing she can do about it - except hope that other post-secondary institutions are willing to accept credit from UAT. Trying to trick or by-pass the system is a BAD IDEA and I would be suspicious of any schools that try such tactics. |
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