Sunday, May 24, 2020

Possibly 95 credits, without official transcripts

If Ms. Reade had already been accepted to law school in California, then she must already have finished 60 undergraduate credits before she moved to Washington.

If the 35 credits on the unofficial transcript from Antioch that she sent to the New York Times are full credits, then she's already at 95 undergraduate credits before anyone has issued subpoenas to any of her schools for official, printed records.

The typical number of course credits needed for a Bachelor's Degree is 120.  Antioch uses quarter credits, and it's unclear from reporting thus far how that translates on a final transcript.





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The Seattle University School of Law Alumni Profile doesn't say which law school in California had previously accepted Ms. Reade.


However, here's an example of needing neither a Bachelor's Degree nor an Associate's Degree to be accepted to law school in California:


Quote:




Webpage:

https://montereylaw.edu/no-bachelors-degree-no-problem/


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If the requirements for admission to Seattle University School of Law when Ms. Reade applied were like those of Monterey College of Law and San Luis Obispo College of Law now, then Ms. Reade might not even have needed any credits from Antioch to be admitted.  She obviously has at least 35 of them by some standard, in addition to what she earned in California.