No need to panic.
The bachelor's degree can be in any major; it doesn't have to be in interpreting.
Associate degree ITP credits can still be transferred to four-year programs.
Yes, but I would suggest you get as many hours in interpreting courses as possible.Hmmmmm so if I finish getting my BA in Early Childhood Ed with a cert in interpreting it will be ok?
Come back when you're sober. :roll:julie, i fucking love that cats tailing chasing humous vidoe capture, its endearing oh better yet it adoring...
other than that i dont give a shit about anything else in this thread - sorry
Yes, but I would suggest you get as many hours in interpreting courses as possible.
Here's something about the degree requirements:
http://rid.org/UserFiles/File/pdfs/Certification_Documents/NewEducationalRequirementsFAQ_090819.pdf
No need to panic.
The bachelor's degree can be in any major; it doesn't have to be in interpreting.
Associate degree ITP credits can still be transferred to four-year programs.
Interpreting does have its challenges.Thanks both Reba & Oddball for easing my fears. sometimes I feel like the Gods are against me from getting into a better place than I am. Obstacles keep popping up in my path everytime I think I have finally gotten through.
Interpreting does have its challenges.
Are you a member of RID? If you join RID you will get their magazine Views , the annual Journal of Interpretation, and email notifications that will keep you informed about what's going on in the interpreting field. You can also review their website periodically to keep up with things so you won't be hit with any surprises.
Your ITP department head and instructors should be keeping their students informed, too.
Why do you need an immunization record?Right now my classes are on hiatus, cause of financial reasons. I was one semester away from getting my AS in early childhood ed when I found the closer ITP, so I transferred into the ITP. But I found out that I didn't have all the prerequisites to get in. Then the school lost my immunization record from my old school. :roll: then when I went to get another copy I found out I had an outstanding bill and couldn't get the record, nor could I afford to pay it.
Why do you need an immunization record?
Take each hurdle one at a time, and you should make it over.
Are you a dorm student? Is that why they require immunizations? What kind do you need? I thought the MMR was normally done only once in a lifetime?As far as I know all NY colleges/universities require proof of immunization. My problems are:
1. I have no insurance, so no GP with records
2. I am 37 and my High school only holds immunization records for 18yrs. I am going to have my 20th year reunion next summer.
3. I got the free MMR shots at the last college I was at. i asked the new college if there was a program like that there but the nurse said no. I was willing to have yet another round of MMR shots so I could go to this school.
Are you a dorm student? Is that why they require immunizations? What kind do you need? I thought the MMR was normally done only once in a lifetime?
What is "GP"?
Can you go to a free or low-cost health clinic for low income people to get the shots?General Practitioner and no I am not a dorm student. It's a community college I'd be going to, they do not have dorms. And yes normally an MMR vaccination would be once a lifetime. I couldn't prove that I had received mine in the first place, even though I am 37 yrs old and graduated HS in NY.
Can you go to a free or low-cost health clinic for low income people to get the shots?