So I have college credit from tell community colleges. One of then I transfered all the hours over to my current four year University, but the other I have not yet, mostly because of technical reasons that prevent me from using their website and ordering a transcript. So all year, I’ve been meaning to call them and work it out.
The thing is though, I only have 10 passed credits from them, and not a single one will count towards my degree. They won’t count for my core classes since I already took most of those. I already have too many classes that aren’t relevant to my degree. So from my point of view,there isn’t a reason.
Also, besides the 10 hours, I also have a D in a class. I know they won’t accept it, but I’m a little worried it will show up somewhere someday.
Also, I’m not trying to hide my old college or anything. I already have it on file and it shows up on my transcript that I attended there, it’s just that at the moment. It’s just that I realized I don’t even need the classes for any reason.
Generally the answer is yes unless the college has said no. I’d say to ask at your current university. Maybe a question for the registrar’s office? I wouldn’t take random internet answers on this one. And in the future (like for grad school) they will want them all.
Whenever you apply for admission to a degree program at an accredited college or university in the US, or for a job that requires all of your transcripts, you are obligated to provide official copies of all of your transcripts. Period. It doesn’t matter how old, or how bad, or how un-related to the new program of studies (or the job), or where in the world you earned those credits. You have to send the transcripts.
What the receiving institution makes of them is up to that place. Maybe they will fulfill some random gen eds. Maybe they won’t apply to the degree program at all. Just send the transcript.
Many colleges and universities only record the courses that they accepted for credit toward the degree program, so it is likely that the D won’t ever show up on your university transcript. However a grad school or an employer that requires all transcripts will see it. But any grad program or employer who won’t admit or hire you because of one D in a class you took when you were (presumably) very much younger and stupider than you are at the time of that grad school or job application is a place you don’t want to be associated with anyway.