<p>Let’s just be clear about this, people. If and when you transfer to a new school, even from CC to CC, your old transcript will follow you.</p>
<p>Whether in the form of loans, tuition subsidization by the government, or the use of nationwide clearinghouse to track enrollment, your old transcript will follow you.</p>
<p>If you try to do this and get caught, you’ll receive an academic dismissal. What does that mean, well, you literally can’t do certain jobs with something like this on your record. Literally any job in the legal, medical, or education fields will be off limits. You can’t even be a school nurse if you’ve been charged with academic dishonesty.</p>
<p>while what hellojan is saying is absolutely true, you can however get an academic renewal in some cases. if you failed a class 2 years ago, you can speak to a counselor and petition for an academic renewal and if you get it…then you get a Z instead of a F.</p>
<p>Right, right! There are good, honest ways to deal with failure. Be up front with your counselor or advisor and they’ll help you sort it all out.</p>
<p>When I applied to ITT Tech, they made is sound much like a college. I was young and very dumb… don’t judge. I only went a semester. Granted I did have a lovely 3.9GPA and had passed all of my classes. It does mean something to some, the first time that I applied to community college, they wanted my ITT Tech transcript, this is the only time that I requested that it be sent to a college. I did get those transcripts and found that ITT Tech was no where to be found, I was later told that they where not needed and the advisers just wanted to see which classes I had taken, to better understand what I was originally going to school for. I am now at a four year university, about to go back to a community college for a semester so I can enroll in another four year university, because they have a better anthropology program. </p>
<p>ITT Tech is a “college” just one that is not accredited by the right bodies that allow for credit transfer. Also their degree sometimes are worthless to some employers.</p>