Transferring Colleges Kansas City MO

In the best of worlds you compile a list of colleges, find the most compatible one, and are accepted. Then you have a great time, graduate, and head off to a budding career. This may not be true for everyone, so this article will discuss what happens when a student decides to transfer.

Kansas City University of Medicine & Biosciences
(816) 283-2000
1750 Independence Ave
Kansas City, MO
Truman Medical Center School for Nurse Anesthesia
(816) 404-1100
2301 Holmes St
Kansas City, MO
Concorde Career Colleges - Kansas City
(816) 531-5223
3239 Broadway
Kansas City, MO
Kansas City Art Institute
(816) 472-4852
4415 Warwick Blvd
Kansas City, MO
Rockhurst University
(816) 501-4000
1100 Rockhurst Rd
Kansas City, MO
Saint Paul School of Theology
(816) 483-9600
5123 E. Truman Rd
Kansas City, MO
Metropolitan Community College - Business & Technology
(816) 482-5210
6899 Executive Dr
Kansas City, MO
Metropolitan Community College - Penn Valley
(816) 759-4000
3201 SW Trafficway
Kansas City, MO
Colorado Technical University - North Kansas City
(816) 472-0275
520 E 19th Ave
North Kansas City, MO
University of Missouri - Kansas City
(816) 235-1000
5100 Rockhill Rd
Kansas City, MO
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Transferring Colleges

Transferring: The Big Switch

In the best of worlds you compile a list of colleges, find the most compatible one, and are accepted. Then you have a great time, graduate, and head off to a budding career. 

Let's talk reality
Halfway through your first semester you come to the conclusion that you can't stand being where you are — for whatever reason. The courses don't match your interests. The campus is out in the boonies and you don't ever want to see another cow. You hate the dorm wallpaper (well, scratch that one). 

Or maybe you’ve methodically planned to go to a community college for two years and move to a four-year college to complete your degree. Or perhaps you didn't do that well in high school, but you've wised up and community college has brightened your prospects of getting your four-year degree.

Any one of these fit?
Circumstances shift, people change, and realistically speaking, it's not all that uncommon to transfer. The most common transfers are students who move from a two- to a four-year college or the person who opts for a career change midstream. However, the reasons why students transfer run the gamut.

""There are a zillion reasons why college students decide they don't want to be at an institution,"" says Dr. Rose Rothmeier, Director of Student Services and Counseling at Austin College in Sherman, TX. She has probably encountered every transfer situation there is. In fact, she began a pilot program to mentor incoming transfe...

Author: Amy Ambler

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