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What Should I Do About My College Canceling A Required Course I Am A Senior Thank-you

Does a college give transfer certificate if you cancel admission there or do they just give the previous ones back?

If you cancel before completion of study or academic year ,you will get old once, new if given only when you complete the course or 1 year watch this

What is a polite business response to clients who cancel appointments because a relative is ill?

I believe I would write something like,“Thank you very much for letting me know. Of course I understand your need to cancel our appointment.I am sending my best wishes to you and your and I look forward to rescheduling our appointment at a future date that is convenient to you.”However, what you have written in your answer details is perfectly acceptable, and less formal than my submission. I guess it depends on your relationship to the client and what industry you’re in.

Nursing school: community college or four year university?

Listen to your Mother. Going straight for the 4 year degree is best.

If you screw around with getting an ADN, you may not find a job since many places prefer the BSN.
You may also spend at least another year picking up all the prerequisites required for a 4 year university. Essentially the 4 year degree could turn into 5 or 6 years or in other words, the long and expensive route...and unemployed with only an ADN.

However, if you get into a community college that is associated with a 4 year university program and do all the required courses, you might be okay and can save some money. Since the demand is now for BSNs and not ADNs, several community colleges are eliminating their ADN programs but having a pre-professional nursing program to prep a student for a 4 year degree.

How to get less classes senior year?

So I heard this girl said that she had like 4 classes in senior year and got out of school at like 12 in the afternoon. How is this possible? I know you have to get all your credits but exactly what do I do? Thank you.

In college do classes last for a semester or go all year?

Yes and no. Each individual class will last a semester (or quarter if you are on a quarter schedule). But there are some classes that have 2+ semesters. For example, general chemistry (at my school) is actually a year long course. The first semester is CHEM 101 and the second semester is CHEM 102. So technically, they are different courses (because they have different course numbers) but it is a continuation of the same subject.

You don't have to take CHEM 101 and CHEM 102 right after each other. If you wanted to take CHEM 101 in the fall and CHEM 102 two years from now, you could.

Most of my classes are individual, one semester courses though.

I am a first year engineering student. Can I leave college and join DU next year to pursue a B.Sc course? Am I allowed to do that?

Yes, you can do that.To give you a personal example, I left my B.E in Electronics & Communications Engineering after one year, from one of the prominent universities in that point of time and pursued my dream course in BSc. (Environmental Sciences) from another university. It always pays to pursue your dreams rather than live someone else’s.In my case, I realized that it was definitely not worth my happiness if I try to live up to my parents’ dreams. It had been a difficult choice at that point of time and full of challenges but I refused to live my life full of regrets. Today, that was a choice well made and I still continue to my live on my own terms and conditions.

I suck in math but i really want to be a doctor?

You will need to take at least through Calculus II in college to get into medical school.

AP Stats is probably easier, but AP Calculus will help you more toward your career choice.

I copied this from a site called bestpremed.com:
Medical schools require that you take certain pre-medical classes as undergraduate.

The "pre-med" classes required by virtually all schools in the US are as follows:

A year of Freshman Chemistry along with the appropriate laboratory courses
A year of Organic Chemistry along with laboratory courses
A year of Biology along with laboratory courses
A year of Physics along with laboratory courses
A year of English
A year of Calculus or other advanced math classes, including Statistics
In addition, many schools require a certain number of credits in non-science classes. Less common are the schools that have more specific requirements such as coursework in Behavioral Sciences (Psychology), Philosophy, etc. Consult particular medschools (or look at their web sites) to find out the specifics.

Pre-med requirements play a very important role in admissions for several reasons.

Pre-med requirements make the bulk of the science classes you will take in college and determine your Science GPA, which one of the determinants of your chances of admission.
You will need to get recommendations for medical schools from science faculty, and if you do not take other science classes, getting them from professors who taught pre-med classes will be your only option.
Pre-med requirements cover most of the material you need to know for the MCAT. The better you know the stuff covered in these premed classes the better off you're when the time comes for taking MCAT.
Schools ask you explicitly to list premed requirements along with your grades on their secondary applications, which means they bear a lot of weight.

NOTE: "a year" in terms of college courses is 2 semesters. That means Calc I & II, Phys I & II, Chem I & II, Org Chem I & II, Bio I & II, Eng I & II. All of the science classes should be "for science majors," rather than the easier versions for non-science majors. This means calculus based physics, not algebra based.

Here's a list of the top 100 med schools in the US:
http://www.legaled.com/medschool100.htm

PLEASE HELP! I failed my AP US History exam! How can I retake it?!?

Some of these answers are really rude and unncessary. For one, as an APUSH student myself this year, I can correctly say that the APUSH exam is one of the hardest exams available (AP wise). My teacher's an AP grader, and has stated that the average on an essay is only 2/9 points available. The MC is based off of a bellshaped curve, which makes it rather difficult to do well if you fall under the wrong side of the curve.

You can choose to retake the test next year, but I think that by that time, you might have forgotten everything, and it's even more possible to pass. I suggest you check your local community college, which will often provide high school students the opportunity to take college classes under a special class known as "special admit". By taking a class there, you are given credit for the class if you pass, similar to what occurs with the AP exam. I've been taking classes at my local community college since sophomore year so yes, it is very possible.

Besides, I (who has recieved a 5 on the exam), was severely criticized for hatin' on the DBQ. I got a 750+ on the SAT II US History, and yet someone said I was just making excuses for not knowing my history. Puh-lease. The exam was extremely difficult, in my perspective. So don't worry :)

You cannot retake it during the summer sorry! Unless you go with my community college suggestion

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