<p>I know most colleges ask for official transcripts, and that requires either the school stamp or a signature of a school official, but my school that I did concurrent enrollment at insists that I can't retrieve extra copies of my transcripts, and told me to photocopy mine and bring it to the school and they'd stamp 'Certified True Copy' on the photocopy version.</p>
<p>Does anyone know if this makes it official??</p>
<p>You may be asking the wrong thing. Usual process is that you request the school to send an official transcript to colleges to which you are applying, not give you a copy so you can send it. In fact, if they are going to give you a copy for sending, they could take yours and verify it as official such as putting certified copy on it, but before giving it to you for sending they must put it in a sealed envelope with the school’s official seal over the spot in the center where the envelope is sealed.</p>
<p>Thanks guys! Nah basically I’m homeschooled overseas, and I did concurrent enrollment here, took some of my credits at a local school midway from 9th to 11th grade, and I do not attend there anymore. It’s a secondary school, and kids here don’t go to college until they’re 19, and they attend one more school, and those schools then submit transcripts for them when they apply to college. But in my case, secondary schools don’t submit transcripts to college at all, hence, the best they can do is certify it true for me. </p>