Thursday, May 21, 2020

Transfer Policies Of Transferring From One Institution

With you being assigned as the Southern Regional Education Board President, I am contacting you regarding the transfer policies of transferring from one institution to another. I am in the process of transferring to another college, preferably in the Southern States, not only to be closer to my wife’s family and also my family as well, but due to the cost of living in Denver, Colorado. With being a Military Veteran, I receive the Post 9/11 G.I. Bill that helps me provide with a stipend for my housing allowance and help cover with any other bills in the household. Along with my G.I. Bill, my stipend is $1,719 with my rent being $1,107 plus utilities included. With the cost of living so high in Denver, also the housing market reaching at†¦show more content†¦The major task that the country is facing today is that every state desires to ensure that their populace of students have the levels of schooling to meet their certain profession requirements, but scholars who deci de to relocate to another university are held back by an average of 2 years due to the college courses not being accepted due to the educational level from the previous college. With students wanting to transfer, the students are becoming more frustrated with their courses not transferring and triggering them to repeat the courses over and amass additional credits toward their degree. There needs to be a strategy designed to subsidize the student rather than the institution. All university’s need to make an arrangement for college-transfer students to be more effective; such as sinking the time and rate required for transfer students to receive a bachelor’s degree, providing a petite, clearer track to a bachelor’s degree for transfer students and saving the states currency by restricted extra credit hours occupied by the students. When Congress revised the Higher Education Act, many politicians told their horror stories about how colleges bombed to approve credi ts to transfer students for the work they did at their previous institution. No college can consider that any other school is good enough, so credits are repudiated, and students must repeat the college courses from their former college. With

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