Published May 27, 2011
Ginger Snapp
25 Posts
ARE YOU SERIOUS????
Met with a Rep. from The College Network and he was rude and "evil".....smh
why me? I know 2 people who are going through TCN and they were shocked of the info I told them and they told me he was a LIAR and the info was not correct!
has anyone else had a run in with a rep from TCN that was a JERK:down:
klone, MSN, RN
14,856 Posts
what did he lie about?
JerseyBSN
163 Posts
I know others who have been lied to by a College Network Rep. They lead people to believe that they are associated with Excelsior College and there's absolutely no truth to that. Beware!
"mthly pymnts"- LIE
work at own pace/ exams have no time line-LIE
what happens if you need to take time off/ EMERGENCY-" much time you need"-LIE
ALOT OF -BS-
eriksoln, BSN, RN
2,636 Posts
I was considering using TCN, but the overall opinion of the program is not very good. I talked to multiple sources concerning them (here, co-workers, a couple people in education I happen to know) and they all said pretty much the same thing: They have a lot more people unhappy with them than happy with them. The people that defend them will do so very diligently, but sometimes I wonder if they are not a sales rep. from the company (when its online I mean). I'm yet to run into anyone personally who has had good experiences with them.
psu_213, BSN, RN
3,878 Posts
Is this a 'for profit' college? If so, beware! Seen/heard lots of news stories about for profit colleges recently and the general message has not been good.
SilentfadesRPA
240 Posts
Would it help to report this to the Attorney General in the state they are operating in with cited facts?
XXWeaponX
43 Posts
The College Network is bs. You don't need them. Basically what you get from TCN is signed up at a very high rate to use their "study materials" that you use to then do CLEP or Excelsior testing to get college credits for your GEs. Then, when that is done, they "help" you to sign up for Indiana State University BSN program. This is an application process you can do yourself, it's pretty clearly described on their website.
I found out about TCN from my friend, who fell for their sales pitch. She asked me what I thought, and after reading through all her info, and then reading the reviews, I disdissuaded her from signing up and spending over 10K on this crap.
You can test of of GEs easily on your own. You don't need TCN. Get the REA CLEP books to study from. They work amazingly well. I've tested out of several GE classes, and I did it just fine. Anyone that tells you they have a secret key to a BSN program, with the only caveat being that they want $10K+ from you, well, you should tell them to **** off.
BarbaraNM, ASN, RN
507 Posts
College Network is NOT A COLLEGE!!! It is an overpriced, third party publishing company... ie, a bookstore.
It is not in any way affiliated with Excelsior College, from which the ADN degree is granted.
Beware...
lol.....I have been told to clep out also:up: I will look into this
THANX xoxo
LadyinScrubs, ASN, RN
788 Posts
is this a 'for profit' college? if so, beware! seen/heard lots of news stories about for profit colleges recently and the general message has not been good.[/quote]tcn is not a college. they publish study guides to enable those who buy the guides to test out of a class. the tcn representative is actually a salesman and he gets a cut of what he sells you. much has been written about tcn here and others have the same conclusion you have formed. buyer beware, but that does not mean they do not offer a good service. for me, i prefer to go to a college/university that has credits that are transferable...not just transferable to a few colleges/universities. a nurse on the same case as me is retaking some courses via tcn to transfer to isu. we chatted about the tcn program at length, and the nurse is happy with the tcn program.
tcn is not a college. they publish study guides to enable those who buy the guides to test out of a class. the tcn representative is actually a salesman and he gets a cut of what he sells you.
much has been written about tcn here and others have the same conclusion you have formed. buyer beware, but that does not mean they do not offer a good service. for me, i prefer to go to a college/university that has credits that are transferable...not just transferable to a few colleges/universities. a nurse on the same case as me is retaking some courses via tcn to transfer to isu. we chatted about the tcn program at length, and the nurse is happy with the tcn program.
The TCN representative is actually a salesman and he gets a cut of what he sells you.
In that case it really isn't any different that a for profit college.