Somebodyâs not telling the truth. Is it you or the schoolâs website? You said you transferred in. Of course you wouldnât have been required to take the test. Iâm not sure what your point is
If youâre having a hard time understanding how to transition from community college to a top-tier University with a higher education value than MIT, Iâll let you in on a little secret - smart people with good grades get into higher education easier than idiots begging for a scholarship. They also graduate with zero student loan debt.
The rest of the world apparently has to compete for the mediocre degrees.
What does this have to do with whether the school has test requirements on their web page?
Nonsense. College is full of a bunch of air-headed dweebs who are only there because they feel they have to be. Theyâre just hitting another check-mark on the game of life.
Youâre the one who thinks she knows diddly squat about S&T from spending 30 seconds on their brochure, so what ever questions you have at this point are irrelevant. I suggest you try attending the University and get back to me.
Youâre been reduced to flailing. Carry on.
I agree with that during my AA classes. When I got focused on my major, it was more like uber-intelligent savants from India and China competing with average olâ me.
I took a STEM course for my graduation. Average idiots donât even pass their second Calculus class.
Sure thing there, philosophy major.
There are very few savants. Most of us are just faking it to make it. Same as everybody else.
True, but those foreign guys are something else. In a good way.
Isnât that kind of our point?
I dunno, Iâm pretty stoned right now, animating a new fractal video. lol
Here ya go:
lol
This forum is a lot more fun on Sundays.
I took my accounting courses at a state college. It took anyone who had passed a junior college. The intermediate accounting courses were enormous. After that year, classes were much much smaller. Basically, the school didnât weed people out at the beginning, but if they couldnât keep up with the work, they were gone. That seemed like a reasonable alternative to high scores for entrance.
After all, when it comes to the working world, a bad accountant is worse than no accountant.
And as to the value of an accounting degree there, all the big auditing firms, banks, corporations etc. were interviewing there as much as any other school.
I will say Iâm posting out of Colorado.
Happy to help enhance the experience.
Congratulations!