News

Online System to Help Pennsylvania Students Transfer College Credits to Participating Schools

by Ibram Rogers , May 14, 2008

Categories:

Pennsylvania’s massive pool of potential college transfer students now have a system that makes the transfer process easier, less time-consuming, and more affordable.

The state’s Department of Education unveiled Tuesday the Pennsylvania Transfer and Articulation Center (PA TRAC) Web site – www.patrac.org – that provides students with instructions and resources to easily and successfully transfer themselves and their credits to participating colleges and universities in Pennsylvania.

“It will make the transfer process easier and save the transfer students money,” says Pennsylvania Education Department spokesman Michael Race. “They won’t have to do redo courses at one school that they already took at another because the credits don’t transfer. It will encourage them to go on and get a degree, as opposed to giving up in frustration because they can’t get credits to transfer.”

In 2006, Pennsylvania Gov. Edward G. Rendell signed a law mandating the state’s 14 community colleges and 14 universities in the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education to adopt equivalency standards across the state, creating at least 30 hours of foundational courses with the credits that would be easily transferable among those institutions. The law also called for the establishment of an electronic portal that provides public access to transfer information.

As a result of this law, the state not only created the electronic portal, PA TRAC, but it also finalized the transfer course equivalencies and the Transfer Credit Framework that are made available through PA TRAC. The framework — which lists those courses that are easily transferring among participating colleges and universities — goes into effect for students who will matriculate in the fall.

Not only are the 28 colleges in the state’s higher education system going to guarantee certain credit transfers through PA TRAC, but four other institutions not part of the Pennsylvania state system, including Lincoln University and St. Francis University, are participating in the transfer and articulation effort.

1 | 2 | 3
Comments posted here may be reprinted in Diverse: Issues In Higher Education magazine, and may be edited for purposes of clarity and/or space.




FEATURED jobs
Full Time, Tenure Track Faculty
North Seattle Community College

North Seattle Community College (NSCC) is seeking dynamic and collaborative individuals for Faculty positions in Business, Physics, and Visual Arts. These tenure-track positions will be generalists able to prepare and teach courses in their related field.


Enterprise Application Services Business Analyst
Ithaca College

The department of Enterprise Application Services within Ithaca College's Office of Information Technology Services (ITS) invites applications for a Business Analyst position to collaborate with departments across campus to identify, define and document business requirements as part of Enterprise Application Services (EAS)...


Business and Economics Librarian
Cornell University

Requires: Familiarity with software and tools for information management. Excellent communication, presentation, and interpersonal skills. Must enjoy providing services to a diverse audience. Demonstrated initiative and flexibility, and ability to work independently and collaboratively.


Chief Information Officer
State University of New York

The State University of New York (SUNY), the nation s largest and most comprehensive system of public higher education, seeks a Chief Information Officer (CIO). This position is located in Albany, New York at the System Administration of the State University of New York.


Copyright 2012 © Diverse: Issues In Higher Education, a CMA publication.
Cox, Matthews, and Associates, Inc., 10520 Warwick Ave, Suite B-8, Fairfax, VA 22030