smupony94 wrote:I think SMU has a deal with Dallas community college
They did in my heyday. If you had x number of hours and a certain GPA (3.7 I think) you could apply for a transfer scholarship into SMU. Not only were the admissions easier, but you also had the opportunity for a full tuition scholarship. Worst case scenario you would have 1/2 of tuition paid.
Me and 3 from high school did that. So us poor white kids who attended a Dallas Public School got to make something of ourselves. Considering less than a dozen from my high school graduating class even went to college I think that is pretty cool that 1/4 went to SMU.
In my time at SMU I took classes concurrently at Richland CC all the way through my last semester and SMU allowed the classes to transfer directly credit hour for credit hour. It saved me lots of $ at the time as I worked my way through SMU. FYI--
ponyscott wrote:In my time at SMU I took classes concurrently at Richland CC all the way through my last semester and SMU allowed the classes to transfer directly credit hour for credit hour. It saved me lots of $ at the time as I worked my way through SMU. FYI--
I really wish I had done that and I am encouraging my younger cousins to follow that route
ponyscott wrote:In my time at SMU I took classes concurrently at Richland CC all the way through my last semester and SMU allowed the classes to transfer directly credit hour for credit hour. It saved me lots of $ at the time as I worked my way through SMU. FYI--
I really wish I had done that and I am encouraging my younger cousins to follow that route
They don't allow that today as they allow the JC route and take the credits that apply like basic English classes but you can't take JC concurrently FWIW.
RGV Pony wrote:Cox, I've already started to indoctrinate my youngest on the details of the pdf linked in the article below. Hopefully it's still in place in 5 years.
Thanks! I'm actually looking for this type of program. Like you said, hope it's around in five years. College has become so expensive. Only issue is that I hate for them to miss out on those important first couple of years on campus.
ponyscott wrote:In my time at SMU I took classes concurrently at Richland CC all the way through my last semester and SMU allowed the classes to transfer directly credit hour for credit hour. It saved me lots of $ at the time as I worked my way through SMU. FYI--
I really wish I had done that and I am encouraging my younger cousins to follow that route
They don't allow that today as they allow the JC route and take the credits that apply like basic English classes but you can't take JC concurrently FWIW.
You can but it requires pre-approval, isn't allowed for certain requirements, and it makes no sense because anything from 12-18 credit hours is billed at a flat rate and dropping below 12 credit hours moves you from full-time to part-time status which puts scholarships and financial aid at risk
RGV Pony wrote:Cox, I've already started to indoctrinate my youngest on the details of the pdf linked in the article below. Hopefully it's still in place in 5 years.
Thanks! I'm actually looking for this type of program. Like you said, hope it's around in five years. College has become so expensive. Only issue is that I hate for them to miss out on those important first couple of years on campus.
When you look at the cost of private universities, the in-state tuition at UT and TAMU may be the best deal in the US.
Except if you are a strong enough student to get in UT, you can probably get an equalizing scholarship from SMU. For this same cost I would go with SMU and get a more personalized experience.
A&M has dropped in rankings and is more on par with TCU and Baylor at this point.
RGV Pony wrote:Cox, I've already started to indoctrinate my youngest on the details of the pdf linked in the article below. Hopefully it's still in place in 5 years.
Thanks! I'm actually looking for this type of program. Like you said, hope it's around in five years. College has become so expensive. Only issue is that I hate for them to miss out on those important first couple of years on campus.
When you look at the cost of private universities, the in-state tuition at UT and TAMU may be the best deal in the US.
You shouldn't look at the sticker price of tuition, but look at the cost after scholarship/financial aid.