<p>Hi, </p>
<p>Can someone please advise which universities accept transfers after suspension/expulsion?</p>
<p>Thanks.</p>
<p>Hi, </p>
<p>Can someone please advise which universities accept transfers after suspension/expulsion?</p>
<p>Thanks.</p>
<p>I would suggest others read the other thread this poster started before responding.</p>
<p>Lost Student, almost every college will accept transfers. But in your case, you will have to demonstrate that you have remedied the issues…multiple times…that got you expelled. No school is just going to accept you until you can demonstrate that you are honest. Colleges have an issue with repeated dishonesty.</p>
<p>You were not expelled because of poor grades…you were expelled because of repeated dishonesty and cheating. </p>
<p>Given the number of offenses you racked up within a short period of time, most colleges will question the validity of your entire transcript, furthermore. You should speak with a counselor, before your expulsion, to determine how many transferable credits you will have and know exactly how your expulsion and class failures will appear on your transcript. Will you owe your college any money, or do you have outstanding debts? That will also figure prominently in your transfer prospects. Many for-profit and/or on-line colleges will undoubtedly admit you. You might not like the terms they’ll impose for a degree, but they are your likeliest near-term option. Search threads for open-admission colleges. Your chances at colleges with competitive admissions are close to nil in the foreseeable future. </p>
<p><a href=“got a expulsion from University. What should I do? - International Students - College Confidential Forums”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/international-students/1333757-got-a-expulsion-from-university-what-should-i-do.html</a></p>
<p>LostStudent12 - At this point in your life, perhaps you should consider doing a little research on your own, instead of counting on others to do your work for you. It might be a valuable exercise. </p>
<p>For the record, with the large amount of colleges in this country, I doubt you would be able to compile a list unless you got feedback from every individual student who had been in the same situation and got accepted somewhere else. I don’t think you are going to find anything like that here…this kind of topic isn’t something people typically choose to advertise. </p>
<p>I am working on corrections by getting psychiatric treatment and studying a class online. I am trying my best to research on my own, however if anyone is kind enough to lend me a caring hand and give me names of specific colleges, then I would really appreciate. Thanks.</p>
<p>Google “Open Admission Colleges.” </p>
<p>There are a lot of lower-tier private colleges that are strapped for money and aren’t too picky about who they admit, provided the student is full pay.</p>
<p>What about places like Ohio University? Please kindly advise.</p>
<p>What are you asking us to do for you? I don’t know whether OU will accept you, especially since you seem incapable of ascertaining what will and will not appear on your transcrip. Why don’t you contact them for yourself? Your reluctance to do your own work does not bode well for your academic future.</p>
<p>Ohio U’s acceptance rate for transfer applicants is about 75%. They are not an open-admission school. I don’t know whether that 75% includes students with multiple failing grades and expulsions for academic dishonesty. You should contact their admissions office to find out. </p>
<p>Have you ascertained whether you’ll simply get F’s or whether you’ll get F<em>'s? That will likely make a difference.
Some universities may not admit you right away with expulsion and F</em>'s. Many if not most universities request that students be “in good standing” at the university they’re transferring from.
If you’re in Ohio, check out what the pages would tell you at: UAkron, Youngstown, Bowling Green, Ohio U, Kent State, UCincinnati, UToledo, plus the branch campuses which are pretty much open admission such as Miami-Hamilton, Blue Ash (for the publics); for the privates, they may be willing to take a full pay student at Baldwin-Wallace, Franklin, Heidelberg, Marietta, Muskingum, Otterbein, or Wheeling.
Use your search engine to see whether these require students to be in “good standing” to transfer.</p>
<p>Schools that do not have open admission policies are going to ask you why you were expelled from your first school, and you will have to explain that you were caught cheating three times. And if they have standards, they will then be reluctant to admit you, because they will reason that someone who was caught cheating three times is probably a serial cheater who cheated their way to their grades in the other classes too. So they won’t be able to trust any of your classes for transfer.</p>
<p>Ohio U said to explain the suspension in their application. They said they will consider college grades as well. I have a 2.79 so I’m not quite hopeful although the minimum to apply as a transfer is a 2.5.</p>
<p>I ruined my whole life.</p>
<p>Respectfully, it might be tough to transfer from one 4 year university to another one of peer quality if you have such a bad record at the first. I believe in 2nd chances personally, but possibly if you are expelled in December of this year (as your other thread seems to indicate) you will need to take some time establishing that you have changed before you can assume that a selective institution will trust you again.</p>
<p>Is there anything you can do Spring semester at a community college or something that will give you the opportunity that you can use to demonstrate that you have improved? Failing that, if you can work in some field somewhere and get a year or so of experience you might even be able to get some letter of recommendation about your integrity from a boss or mentor, especially if you are able to work closely with someone in a field where you can demonstrate independence, integrity, and maturity.</p>
<p>Realistically, either route will involve taking some time off from being at a 4year school.</p>
<p>OP: I would recommend you work for a while - after a while, your academic record at your current college will be of less import. If you find a job and show yourself able to take on the responsibilities it requires, things will get better. Your life is not ruined. Find a job until the cheating can be forgotten due to your professional behavior. You can resume your studies at any time once you’ve proven yourself trustworthy in another setting. Starting right away at another college probably isn’t the best idea I think.</p>
<p>Originally, your college wanted you take a 2 year break from school after you were caught cheating the second time. That advice is still good. In fact, if you would have taken that advice instead of choosing to make your ill-fated appeal, (which allowed you more time to cheat again) you might have been able to go back there.</p>
<p>I’m not sure why you are taking the online course. Seems like you would want a break. Is your current employer able to offer you more hours?</p>
<p>I am an Ohio University alum. The school has always been very conscientious about cheaters, and has taken disciplinary action with students who were dishonest academically. Your GPA isn’t exactly the top of the heap. You have three cheating infractions which got you expelled.</p>
<p>You will have some serious explaining to do at Ohio University to get accepted there.</p>
<p>Work for a couple years and do some growing up. IMHO, the last thing you need to do is try to get into another school.</p>