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In my current situation my credentials will not allow me to gain admittance into a University (insufficient credits), so my action plan is to attend a community college for one year and then transfer to a University. Will I still be held accountable for not havings earned the high school credits--- and is there a way in which those credits could be earned, in order to be admitted to the University after having completed the 1st year at the CC level?

2007-11-20 15:02:04 · 2 answers · asked by westcoaster34 1 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

2 answers

You will need to finish your high school diploma or get a GED in order to be able to matriculate at the college, and also to transfer to a 4-year university.

2007-11-20 15:08:52 · answer #1 · answered by neniaf 7 · 0 0

If I'm understanding your question correctly, you are worried about having insufficient credits. Does this mean you aren't going to have enough to graduate from high school? You must have a high school diploma to enter a community college.

If you don't have the specific courses required by a university, such as 2 years of foreign language, 3 years of language, or whatever, but have the high school diploma, then community college is a good place to start. When you apply for transfer from a community college to a university, the university only wants to see your college work, test scores, but doesn't need your high school transcripts any longer.

Hope this answers your question. Best of luck!

2007-11-20 15:10:56 · answer #2 · answered by Woods 7 · 0 0

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