HACKER Q&A
📣 rateofchange

Any colleges or universities offering credit for CS courses by exam?


Looking to attempt to accelerate reaching a BS in CS. Having worked as a software developer for decades, I can teach any introductory, intermediate and most advanced programming courses. Anything from basics to data structures, algorithms, computer architecture, embedded systems, real time operating systems, web development, etc. I have worked with over half a dozen languages on various systems, including everything from bare-metal bring-ups in Assembly/Forth to, robotics systems and Python/Django applications.

The point is, I know this stuff. What I know is equivalent to several years of university coursework. I am now interested in obtaining a degree in CS, initially a BS and possibly going on to an MS. This is mostly for personal fulfillment rather than a need.

What I don't want to do is spend three years writing basic code I can write in my sleep.

To this end, I am looking for schools where I might be able to take exams to pass courses rather than have to devote entire semesters or quarters to obtain the credit. I contacted our local college's CS department. While the school does offer credit for prior learning through examination, the CS department is the only one that does not, at this time, offer that option.

There are many interesting online CS courses (For example, I've done the MIT 6.00.1x series), yet none of them provide transferable credits. Does such a thing exist?

An alternative would be super-short terms. If I could take courses that only go for, say, 8 weeks, instead of 20, well, that might be a decent option. I would not have to study much, if at all. So, pass a couple of exams every eight weeks and knock out a few years off a degree timeline quickly.

I'd appreciate any input on this.

Frankly, this is what is missing in online education today. A degree granting program that is compatible with people who might have acquired the knowledge outside university walls. Coding is coding. Algorithms are algorithms. Theory is theory. If you know the subject, and you can prove it, it should not matter one bit where you did the learning.

Thanks.


  👤 WheelsAtLarge Accepted Answer ✓
A lot of schools offer credit by exam for the intro classes. Very few people take advantage of the opportunity so it's not highly known. You need to be enrolled and you need to look in the school's catalog to see what they offer. You can even take the exam in one school and transfer the credits to another school where you want to graduate. Look at junior colleges. They are easy to enroll in and you can transfers the credits to a four year university. Don't expect to get a degree by exam but you can get some of the intro and general education classes out of the way. Also there are so many schools doing remote that it's a very good time to enroll in a school and never have to go to a classroom. This expands your choices.

👤 bjourne
CS is way more than just programming. I can promise you that if you pursue this path you will learn tons of stuff you had absolutely no idea about. You may not realize how little you know... At my local university the strongest students were writing their own chess engines in C++ in the first half of their first semester. The second year their own ann libraries.

Not saying you shouldn't do this - I think you should because CS is tons of fun - but thinking you can do it without spending time and effort on it is naive. If you have money saved why not take an extended vacation and run through as many CS and math courses as you can?


👤 robcohen
I’ll go one step further, with most lower level courses, there should be large open knowledge banks of questions which can be solved within a reasonable time (<15 min) and all homework/tests for testing knowledge should be automatically generated from a random subset of questions. Testing would occur in proctored settings and the knowledge banks should be large enough to not be able to be gamed. Separate the instruction from the certification. Why this hasn’t happened yet for things like CS and Math I have no idea.

👤 nextos
In Europe there are many universities where you can register for as many courses as you want, ignore lectures, sit the exam, and get full credit in case you pass.

In principle, nobody prevents you from passing the whole BSc in two semesters.

This opportunity gets especially interesting when you consider national open / remote universities, as you won't need to travel to pass the exams.

However, coding is one thing, theory is another one. Even if you know theory pretty well, you will need to review a bit which kind of imposes a speed limit on how fast you can pass said courses.


👤 elonmollusc
The term you're looking for is competency-based education. If you can demonstrate that you meet the learning goals for a course, usually by taking an exam, you get credit for it. You only need to invest time in studying the parts of the course that you haven't yet mastered.

Western Governors University is the largest and best-known school with competency-based degrees. They use an online model where you pay a fixed amount per semester, but with no cap on the number of credits you can complete.


👤 endisneigh
There’s no US degree they offers credit by only taking the exam as far as I know.

👤 JoeyBananas
I can tell you the University of Minnesota doesn't.