What happened

I didn’t pass enough subjects. To study there again, I’ll have to go through regular admission procedure again, but it’s too late to sign up for next year.

Passed subjects acceptance

Like other colleges, the one I went to accepts passed subjects from previous studies. So if you studied at a different college and passed the same subjects (within past x years), you don’t have to re-do them.

However, unlike with the others I checked, our college will only accept subjects passed at A or B. This probably makes sense, as they might not trust other colleges to hold students up to the same standards.

This means that I’ll have to retake the subjects I already passed.

Idea 1 - immediate transfer request (not possible)

Not wanting to wait a year, I hoped to go to different college of the same university, and ask for transfer right after registration. (If rejected, idea 2)

Unfortunately, the university’s rules only permit transfers within the same field, and the same one is not available to sign up for anymore.

Idea 2 - Piggyback on different college for a year

There are 2 colleges on the same university that still accept students and offer housing on a dorm in the same city.
The university rules also permit students to change their study plans, with possibility of registering subjects on different colleges of the same university.

Thus my idea was to officially “attend” College of Mechanical Engineering (which is desperate enough to have no entrance exams), withdraw from all their subjects, and register relevant subjects on College of Informatics.

I asked the study department about my plan. They confirmed it should be possible, but the A/B grading requirement remains.

How does that make sense?

I could take their subjects at their own college, pass them by their own standards, yet they themselves wouldn’t accept them.

Alternatively, I could attend an easier college with lower standards, spend less effort for A/B, and pass just the same.

Alternative ideas

Only idea 1 makes sense economically (if the request got accepted), as otherwise I’d pay for 2 extra years rather than just one.
That sucks, I wished to basically go “hey, I am still here like a cockroach”.

So to stay here, it’s best to just get a job for a year and try not to loose too many fingers (all I found in my location with provided training and no required education is “plastic press operator” or “metal machinist”).

Or give up, and study a different field.

  • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    I’m only familiar with the USA regional accreditation process of schools which this doesn’t sound like, so I’ll have to ask questions about the rules in your system:

    To study there again, I’ll have to go through regular admission procedure again, but it’s too late to sign up for next year.

    Okay its too late to go through the regular admissions procedure for the school you studied at (which I’ll call the 1st school), have you confirmed its also too late to go through the regular admissions process at every other school your original school accepts transfer credits from?

    If at least one school would let you go through the regular admissions process (not try to transfer into that 2nd school), then just attend that 2nd school taking different courses you need for your degree earning As or Bs grades, then transfer those newly gained credits back to your 1st school. So not this year, but next year go through the regular admissions process of your 1st school.

    • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)OP
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      5 hours ago

      different courses

      The point is, they won’t even accept the courses I already passed (which are all below B except for English), because this rule is just applied universally. So it would be easier to re-take what I had until now since I already know something.
      In this case, idea 2 would probably make more sense since I also know the instructors tend to give out the same assignments between different years.

      Unless you meant to attend an easier college with the required courses.
      But also it is too late. The only colleges taking students at this time of year are ones that have to do 2nd rounds due to low numbers, which very much is nothing IT-related.

      Anyway, bigger issue is I’d have to pay for 2 extra years (they also don’t allow admission into a higher year).

      every other school your original school accepts transfer credits from

      That one is also funny. There’s no official list. The only requirement is A/B grade. If that is met, I can send a request to have those results accepted along with the courses’ syllabi, and then I’ll see based on their response.

      • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        The point is, they won’t even accept the courses I already passed (which are all below B except for English), because this rule is just applied universally.

        Who cares if they don’t accept courses you’ve already passed. You’re not planning on graduation from 2nd school. You want to graduate from 1st school. When regular admissions open up again in the future for 1st school, you go there and transfer the credits in you earned at and 2nd school. Your prior 1st school credits (below As and Bs) will still be at 1st school so you won’t have to worry about them being accepted as transfer credits because you’d not be transferring them in from outside as the those low grade credits are already inside.

        The only colleges taking students at this time of year are ones that have to do 2nd rounds due to low numbers, which very much is nothing IT-related.

        Do you have nothing bu IT-related credits you have to earn for you degree? You’re completely done with 100% of your Math, History, Art, and Science credits no related to IT? If you have any of those non-IT credits you still need to earn, thats what you can do this year at 2nd school. Next year you can go back to 1st school and work on IT related credits again.

        That one is also funny. There’s no official list.

        Well I guess this is one area the USA is better. There are agreed standards that allow for nearly seamless transfer of student’s credits between large groups of universities and colleges.

        The only requirement is A/B grade. If that is met, I can send a request to have those results accepted along with the courses’ syllabi, and then I’ll see based on their response.

        Okay, so take courses at 2nd school, do well in 2nd school classes, and send the request to have those credits accepted at 1st school next year.

        Otherwise it sounds like your best choice is to give up on school this year, and truly commit yourself next year. Any chance you have enough IT experience to get a junior role so you can at least be growing in your field while you’re out of school?