Denmark Technical College complies with the Statewide Articulation Agreement. The College maintains articulation agreements for specific majors with the following state institutions:
- Anderson University
- Benedict College
- Columbia College
- Bethel University (TN)
- Claflin University
- Claflin University RN to BSN
- Clemson University
- Coastal Carolina University
- Columbia College
- ECPI University
- Lander University
- Lander University Bachelor of Applied Science in Business Administration
- MUSC Online Bachelor of Science in Healthcare Studies
- Newbery College Online Bachelor of Science in Respiratory Therapy
- South Carolina Fire Academy
- South Carolina Independent Colleges and Universities
- South Carolina State University
- Southern Wesleyan University
- University of South Carolina
- Voorhees College
- Webster University
Although the College cannot guarantee the transferability of its courses, articulation agreements are generally accurate guidelines regarding the acceptability of Denmark Technical College’s courses by the participating institutions.
Post-Secondary Non-Academic Achievement
Denmark Technical College offers potential mature students, with full-time jobs and demanding schedules, an opportunity to earn an associate degree, diploma, or certificate through credit for work or public service by taking courses at Denmark Technical College, and through other approved testing options.
Any person who is at least 25 years old and has not been enrolled in a higher education institution for the past five years or is resuming his education after a one-year break, must have a minimum of five years of acquired work or public service experience to be eligible for credit for Non-Academic Achievement.
A potential student may be awarded a maximum of one-third of the credits for program completion. Potential students are not exempted from the College’s admissions requirements or other academic regulations.
Transfer Officer
The college’s Transfer Officer is the Registrar, who can be contacted at Denmark Technical College, 1126 Solomon Blatt Blvd. Post Office Box 327, Denmark, SC 29042 – phone (803) 793-5174.
State Transfer Policies and Procedures Background
Section 10-C of the South Carolina School-to-Work Transition Act (1994) stipulates that the Council of College and University Presidents and the State Board for Technical and Comprehensive Education, operating through the Commission on Higher Education, will develop better articulation of associate and baccalaureate degree programs. To comply with this requirement, the Commission upon the advice of the Council of Presidents established a Transfer Articulation Policy Committee composed of four-year institutions’ Vice Presidents for Academic Affairs and the Associate Director of Instruction of the State Board for Technical and Comprehensive Education. The principal outcomes derived from the work of that committee and accepted by the Commission on Higher Education on July 6, 1995, were:
*An expanded list of 86 courses which will transfer to four-year public institutions of South Carolina from the two-year public institutions.
*A statewide policy document on good practices in transfer to be followed by public institutions of higher education in the State of South Carolina, which was accepted in principle by the Advisory Committee on Academic Programs and the Commission.
*Six task forces on statewide transfer agreements, each based in a discipline or broad area of the baccalaureate curriculum.
In 1995, the General Assembly passed ACT 137, which stipulated further that the South Carolina Commission on Higher Education “notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary, will have the following additional duties and functions with regard to the various public institutions of higher education.” These duties and responsibilities include the Commission’s responsibility “to establish procedures for the transferability of courses at the undergraduate level between two-year and four-year institutions or schools.” This same provision is repeated in the legislation developed from the Report of the Joint Legislative
Study Committee, which was formed by the General Assembly and signed by the Governor as Act 359 of 1996.
Act 137 directs the Commission to adopt procedures for the transfer of courses from all two-year public to all four-year public institutions of higher education in South Carolina. Proposed procedures are listed below.
Unless otherwise stated, these procedures became effective immediately upon approval by the Commission and were to be fully implemented, unless otherwise stated, by September 1, 1997.
Statewide Articulation of 86 Courses
- The Statewide Articulation Agreement of 86 courses already approved by the South
Carolina Commission on Higher Education for transfer from two-to-four-year public institutions will be applicable to all public institutions, including two-year institutions and institutions within the same system. In instances where an institution does not have synonymous courses to those on this list, it will identify com parable courses or course categories for acceptance of general education courses on the statewide list.
Admissions Criteria, Course Grades, GPA’s, Validation
- All four-year public institutions will issue annually in August a transfer guide covering at least the following items:
- The definition of a transfer student and requirements for admission both to the institution and, if more selective, requirements for admission to programs.
- Limitations placed by the institution or its programs for acceptance of standardized examinations (e.g., SAT, ACT) taken more than a given time ago, for academic coursework taken elsewhere, for coursework repeated due to failure, for coursework taken at another institution while the student is academically suspended at his or her home institution, and so forth.
- Institutional and, if more selective, programmatic maximums of course credits allowable in transfer.
- Institutional procedures used to calculate student applicants’ GPAs for transfer admission. Such procedures will describe how nonstandard grades (withdrawal, withdrawal failing, repeated course, etc.) are evaluated; and they will also describe whether all course work taken prior to transfer or just coursework deemed appropriate to the student’s intended four-year program of study is calculated for purposes of admission to the institution and/or programmatic major.
- Lists of all courses accepted from each technical college (including the 86 courses in the Statewide Articulation Agreement) and the course equivalencies (including “free elective” category) found at the home institution for the courses accepted.
- Lists of all articulation agreements with any public South Carolina two-year or other institution of higher education, together with information about how interested parties can access these agreements.
- Lists of the institution’s Transfer Officer (s) personnel together with telephone and FAX numbers, office address, and e-mail address.
- Institutional policies related to “academic bankruptcy” (i.e., removing an entire transcript or parts thereof from a failed or underachieving record after a period of years has passed) so that the reentry into the four-year institution with course credit earned in the interim elsewhere is done without regard to the student’s earlier record.
- “Residency requirements” for the minimum number of hours required to be earned at the institution for the degree.
- Coursework (individual courses, transfer blocks, statewide agreements) covered within these procedures will be transferable if the student has completed coursework with a “C” grade (2.0 on a 4.0 scale) or above, but transfer of grades does not relieve the student of the obligation to meet any
G.P.A. requirements or other admissions requirements of the institution or program to which application has been made.
- Any four-year institution which has institutional or programmatic admissions requirements for transfer students with cumulative grade point averages (GPAs) higher than 2.0 on a 4.0 scale will apply such entrance requirements equally to transfer students from regionally accredited South Carolina public institutions regardless of whether students are transferring from a four-year or two-year institution.
- Any multi-campus institution or system will certify by letter to the Commission that all coursework at all its campuses applicable to a particular degree program of study is fully acceptable in transfer to meet degree requirements in the same degree program at any other of its campuses.
- Any coursework (individual courses, transfer blocks statewide agreements) covered within these procedures will be transferable to any public institution without any additional fee and without any further encumbrance such as a “validation examination,” “placement examination/instrument,” verification instrument,” or any other stricture, notwithstanding any institutional or system policy, procedure, regulation to the contrary.
- The following Transfer Blocks/Statewide Agreements taken at any two-year public institution in South Carolina will be accepted in their totality toward meeting baccalaureate degree requirements at all four-year public institutions in relevant four-year degree programs as follows:
- Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences: Established curriculum block of 46-48 hours
- Business Administration: Established curriculum block of 46-51 semester hours
- Engineering: Established curriculum block of 33 semester hours
- Science and Mathematics: Established curriculum block of 51-53 semester hours.
- Teacher Education: Established curriculum block of 38-39 semester hours for Early Childhood, Elementary, and Special Education students only. Secondary education majors and students seeking certification who are not majoring in teacher education should consult the Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences or the Math and Science transfer blocks, as relevant, to assure transferability of coursework.
- Nursing: By statewide agreement, at least 60 semester hours will be accepted by any public four- year institution toward the baccalaureate completion program (BSN) from graduates of any South Carolina public associate degree program in nursing (AND), provided that the program is accredited by the National League of Nursing and that the graduate has successfully passed the National Licensure Examination (NCLEX) and is currently licensed as a Registered Nurse.
- Any “unique” academic program not specifically or by extension covered by one of the statewide transfer blocks/agreements listed in #4 above must either create its own transfer block of 35 or more credit hours with the approval of CHE staff or will adopt either the Arts/Social Science/Humanities or the Science/Mathematics block. The institution at which such program is located will inform the staff of the CHE and every institutional president and vice president for academic affairs about this decision.
- Any student who has completed either an Associate of Arts or Associate of Science degree program at any public two-year South Carolina institution which contains within it the total coursework found in either the Arts/Social Sciences/Humanities Transfer Block or the Math/Science Transfer Block will automatically be entitled to junior-level status or its equivalent at whatever public senior institution to which the student might have been admitted. (Note: As agreed by the Committee on Academic Affairs, junior status applies only to campus activities such as priority order for registration for courses, residence hall assignments, parking, athletic event tickets, etc. and not in calculating academic degree credits.)
Related Reports and Statewide Documents
- All applicable recommendations found in the Commission’s report to the General Assembly on the School- to-Work Act (approved by the Commission and transmitted to the General Assembly on July 6, 1995) are hereby incorporated into the procedures for transfer of coursework among two- and four-year institutions.
- The policy paper entitled State Policy on Transfer and Articulation, as amended to reflect changes in the numbers of transfer blocks and other Commission action since July 6, 1995, is hereby adopted as the statewide policy for institutional good practice in the sending and receiving of all course credits to be transferred (Contact the Division of Academic Affairs for copies of this report.)
Assurance of Quality
- All claims from any public two- or four-year institution challenging the effective preparation of any other public institution’s coursework for transfer purposes will be evaluated and appropriate measures will be taken to reassure that the quality of the coursework has been reviewed and approved on a timely basis by sending all receiving institutions alike. This process of formal review will occur every four years through the staff of the Commission on Higher Education, beginning with the approval of these procedures.
Statewide Publication and Distribution of Information on Transfer
- The staff of the Commission on Higher Education will print and distribute copies of these procedures upon their acceptance by the Commission. The staff will also place this document and the Appendices on the Commission’s Home Page on the Internet under the title “Transfer Policies.”
- By September 1 of each year, all public four-year institutions will place the following materials on their internet websites:
- A copy of this entire document.
- A copy of the institution’s transfer guide.
- By September 1 of each year, the State Board for Technical and Comprehensive Education will place the following materials on its internet website:
- A copy of their entire document.
- Provide to the Commission staff in a format suitable for placing on the Commission’s website a list of all articulation agreements that each of the sixteen technical colleges has with public and other four- year institutions of higher education, together with information about how interested parties can access those agreements.
- Each two-year and four-year public institutional catalog will contain a section entitled “Transfer: State Policies and Procedures.” Such a section at a minimum will:
- Publish these procedures in their entirety (except Appendices).
- Designate a Chief Transfer Officer at the institution who will provide information and other appropriate support for students considering transfer and recent transfers. Will serve as a clearinghouse for information on issues of transfer in the State of South Carolina and provide definitive institutional rulings on transfer questions for the institution’s students under these procedures. Will also work closely with feeder institutions to assure ease in transfer for their students.
- Designate other programmatic Transfer Officer (s) as the size of the institution and the variety of its programs warrant.
- Refer interested parties to the institution Transfer Guide (if applicable).
- Refer interested parties to institutional and Commission on Higher Education’s websites
- for further information regarding transfer.
- In recognition of its widespread acceptance and use through the United States, SPEEDE/EXPRESS should be adopted by all public institutions and systems as the standard for electronic transmission of all student transfer data.
- In conjunction with the colleges and universities, develop and implement a statewide Transfer Equivalency Database at the earliest opportunity. (As an electronic counseling guide, this computerized, on-line
instrument will allow students and advisors to access all degree requirements for every major at every public four-year institution in South Carolina. Also, the Database will allow students to obtain a better understanding of institutional programs and program requirements and select their transfer courses accordingly, especially when the student knows the institution and the major to which he or she is transferring.)
Development of Common Course System
- Adopt a common statewide course numbering system for common freshman and sophomore courses of the technical colleges, two-year regional campuses of the University of South Carolina, and the senior institutions.
- Adopt common course titles and descriptions for common freshman and sophomore courses of the technical colleges, two-year regional campuses of the University of South Carolina, and senior institutions. The Commission will convene statewide disciplinary groups to engage in formal dialogue for these purposes. A common course numbering system and common course titles and descriptions for lower-division coursework at all public institutions in the state can help reduce confusion among students about the equivalency of their two-year coursework with lower division coursework at the four-year level. To this end, a common system leaves no doubt about the comparability of content, credit, and purpose among the lower-division courses at all public colleges and universities in South Carolina. It would also help eliminate institutional disagreement over the transferability of much lower-division course work, thus clearing a path for easier movement between the technical colleges and senior institutions.