Will your associate degree give you the boost needed for higher degrees?

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Associate degree programs are a great short-term training option for people who want to move quickly from the classroom to the job market. They're available at many community and local colleges and often have course schedules that accommodate working adults. Depending on your field, you can qualify to pursue many entry-level jobs with an associate degree to your name.

But sometimes, an associate degree is not enough. If you're an associate degree holder who's been working for a while, and you've decided it's time for more training, you might be wondering if you can count your associate toward a bachelor's degree. There are now bachelor's degree completion programs that can help you build on your associate degree. These degree completion courses may be available online as well as on-campus.

Here is some general information about what you need to know before you enroll in a bachelor's degree completion program.

All schools accept credit differently

First, you need to make sure that the college or online school you're planning to apply to will accept your associate degree. Individual colleges and universities have the right to accept or reject your previous credits for any reason, so it's important to discuss your situation with a representative at the institution you want to attend.

If you earned your associate degree at a community college, try calling a counselor there to find if they have articulation agreements with any colleges or universities. Articulation agreements are a defined set of terms that create a partnership between community colleges and four-year schools. These agreements explicitly lay out terms for transferring credits from the two-year school to the four-year school to complete a traditional or online bachelor's degree, often by telling you exactly which courses the four-year school will accept credits from.

Depending on the courses you took, you may need to make up credits before you can start earning your bachelor's degree. This is especially true if your associate degree was a career degree rather than a transfer degree.

Transfer degrees versus career degrees

Typically, an associate degree program requires about 20 courses, or 60 credits to graduate, and involves a mix of general education and career-specific classes. "Transfer degrees" are associate degree programs designed to prepare a student for a bachelor's degree down the road. To that end, transfer degrees have more general education requirements built into the curriculum. In general, if you earned an Associate of Arts, Associate of Fine Arts, Associate of Arts in Teaching or Associate of Science, you've earned a transfer degree.

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