If you fail a college course can you take it’s equivalence?

by Leo Farinha on September 4, 2011 · 2 comments

in speech making

Inquiry by Always Feared: If you a college can you take it’s equivalence?
So like if you failed elements of public speaking course and take interpersonal interaction course instead of retaking Viagra Online Antibiotics Online Without Prescription the first one, or do you have to retake the class you received a terrible grade in?

Best answer:

Answer by Katie W
If that particular class is a requirement for your degree, you have to take the course again; or if it’s a requirement for another class you want. If not, then Buy tadalis sx soft online not, but you’ll still have it on your transcript dragging down your GPA.

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{ 2 comments }

Meghan M September 4, 2011 at 4:02 am

Its hard to say without knowing the school’s policies.

For some schools if you retake the EoP course a second time it will erase your first grade – this will help your GPA.

It would be best to email the registrar, they are the people who manage grades and credits. Another place would be the office of the academic dean, which can go by different names (academic advising at my college).

Good luck!

ChaoHuei September 4, 2011 at 4:38 am

I’d suggest checking to see if your school has policies on course equivalencies. For example, my school has two charts: one for the College of Engineering and one for the College of Literature, Science, & the Arts. That might give you an idea as to what sort of things your school will accept.

Even if the course you want to transfer is on the chart, there’s no guarantee that the school will accept it this term; syllabi and courses change. You may have to fill out an equivalence request form to ensure that your school will accept your course as an equivalent. If the course you didn’t do so hot in was a concentration requirement (as opposed to a prereq), it’s less likely that you school will accept your request, since schools often like to have students learn it “their way.” If you’re taking the course at the same school but under a different college (e.g. a engineering-run probability course vs. the letters & sciences equivalent), you’ll probably have to fill out the form anyway just to be sure it’s OK.

Anyway, assuming all works out, make sure to have the transcript from the other school sent to your home school so your advisers can finish up the processing.

As far as grades go, that depends on your school’s policies. Michigan only accepts transferred courses as pass/fail, so it didn’t affect my GPA, but the school accepted the credit as if I had passed the equivalent course at Mich. I’d check with an adviser just to make sure you know what’s going to happen.

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