Co Enrollment at ACC?

<p>So I got accepted into UT, but into COLA. To be admitted into CNS, I need to take Calculus, and I heard it's horrible at UT. (I actually catch on to math as long as I study..A LOT).</p>

<p>However, is there a way to take Calculus at ACC while still being a full time student at UT? If yes, will this affect my financial aid (will I receive more in the pell grant?)? Is there certain amount of hours I need to be enrolled in both schools?</p>

<p>I know that if you're a student at the CNS, you can not take any math or science courses outside UT during the Fall/Spring semesters, however, does this rule still apply to COLA students? </p>

<p>This way I can get my Calc credit out of the way to transfer, and not kill my UT GPA if it doesn't work out so well.</p>

<p>I WOULD take it this summer at my CC, but I'm volunteering abroad and I don't wanna pass up the chance to volunteer in a different country. </p>

<p>if you had said I have to take a foreign language course, I can either take it cheaper at ACC and it’s easier, then no brainer, ACC. There is no significant difference between UT and ACC courses. However, the reason UT calculus is hard is because they want you to have more from your education, they want you to know how to think with the math, not just mindless perform math by numbers. At ACC you get what you pay for, a course that teaches you the steps and you memorize them. Normally, I would say go with the quality of education, but life experience on the other hand for a COLA student is exactly why someone should be in COLA. So in that case thinking mathematically will probably not be all that important to your future plans, so go for it take cal at ACC. </p>

<p>Im planning to internally transfer to CNS into the Public Health program- more science heavy than math (I’m fine with taking science at UT) </p>

<p>So does UT allow students to take a course at ACC while being enrolled in UT? @UTPSY2014 </p>

<p>absolutely you can take an ACC course while at UT. Fact is it’s cheaper, usually it is easier, because the material has to be watered down to educate all ranges of students </p>

<p>Thank you! I thought there might be a specific rule against taking math courses outside UT but as a COLA student for my first semester I don’t think it should matter. </p>