Can a 15 year old get a GED in the state of Oklahoma, or is it 16?
Can a 15 year old get a GED in the state of Oklahoma, or is it 16?
http://www.my-ged.com/ged-testing-pr...a/default.aspx
16 plus be a resident of Oklahoma and not currently enrolled in a high school.
I was bored so I 'googled' it for you.
BOOMER ......... SOONER!
AGGIES ......... SUCK!
... and the home, of the, SOONERS!
THUNDER THE F&*K UP!
that sounds dumb
why does it matter if you are under 16 or already enrolled?
why should you have to drop out first?
"Discourage litigation. Persuade your neighbors to compromise whenever they can. Point out to them how the nominal winner is often a real loser; in fees, expenses and waste of time." -- Abraham Lincoln, (1809-1865) Lawyer and President who saved the United States.
"Without opportunities on the part of the poor to obtain expert legal advice, it is idle to talk of equality before the law"-- Justice Chas. Evans Hughes
I would seriously wonder about a states GED exam if a 15 year old could pass it. California's age requirement is 18, 17 if you meet some special criteria. I am guessing it's lower in Ok due to some old farming situations where kids had to forego school to work a family farm.
Few things scream "do not hire" like a GED, regardless of age. Maybe it's different in other places but the police, sheriff and fire departments list a GED as a minimum requirement yet I've never heard of anybody getting a good job with a GED. I am sure there have to be some out there I am sure maybe a kid is so smart they take the GED and then immediately start college courses.
GED stands for "good enough diploma". Then after you get your GED you can go to college - community college. Why do they call it community college? Because anyone in the community can get in. A community college is a disco with books. "I'm gonna get my learn on!" - Chris Rock
"Democracy without respect for individual rights sucks. It's just ganging up against the weird kid, and I'm always the weird kid.."
Penn Jillette
I was at a Job fair type deal with my last ex step kid, she did Grad High school.
But I was talking to a recruiter and i asked him his companys position on hiring a GED person over a Reg H.S. Grad
his words . they prefer a GED for the simple fact that usually the kid dropped out, then realized they made a mistake and went back and earned the GED. Where as a reg HS Grad thot they were owed the world.
Dont know if thats true every where, but it made a kinda sense to me.
Quote
If God wanted Men to look women in the eyes, He wouldnt have gave em Boobs !
GED, BA and good job right here.
I got a 27 on my ACT my sophomore year of HS and was told by the State Department of Ed. that score coupled with a GED would get me into OU, where I planned to go.
When my parents got divorced soon after that and started moving around (I attended four different high schools between sophomore and junior year) I started caring less and less about high school. When both my parents informed me they were moving again right before my senior year, meaning no matter which parent I chose to live with I'd have to do my senior year in a new school, I said "forget this crap," dropped out, worked full time, took the GED (99th percentile, heh,) and started college with my high school class.
I have never had a problem getting hired anywhere.
No one cares what you did in high school once you've got a college degree. Which is good for me because me high school grades were nothing to brag about.
"Democracy without respect for individual rights sucks. It's just ganging up against the weird kid, and I'm always the weird kid.."
Penn Jillette
I really should have skipped my senior year in high school, taken my GED and went straight to the university.
That last year was a complete waste because my high school didn't offer any senior level classes in either math or science. I only had to complete one senior level English class and I got nothing from that. I just had to mess around the rest of the morning and could leave school at lunch time. Community college courses are great and cheap if the credits transfer to the university that you intend to attend. I went to that higher ed center in Ardmore at night to get through some of the basic required classes and that seemed to work out very well for me. Because I got the required credits before graduation my senior year at the university, I used my four-year scholarship to start working on graduate level classes.
I think there are a lot of ways to game the tertiary education system. I would say go to a cheap undergraduate school (including community colleges) and a well-known graduate school and you can still get that good job.
Chuck's version of Christmas is the Anti-SicEm-
SicEmBaylor
I'll remember that when I'm treating patients with my community college nursing degree next year.
Just because anyone can get in, doesn't mean they can do well. The info I'm learning is the same that the people going to OU nursing school are. They are just getting some leadership and management classes to go along with it. And at least for the health degree programs, there are strict requirements to get accepted. Community college does start off kind of like high school, but just like it, you get out of it whatever effort you put into it. It's way cheaper than OU as well.
Just another data point. The USAF won't enlist someone with a GED and nothing more. GED-holders must have two semesters of JC in addition to a GED to be eligible.
HS diploma holders can enlist with nothing more.
"Discourage litigation. Persuade your neighbors to compromise whenever they can. Point out to them how the nominal winner is often a real loser; in fees, expenses and waste of time." -- Abraham Lincoln, (1809-1865) Lawyer and President who saved the United States.
"Without opportunities on the part of the poor to obtain expert legal advice, it is idle to talk of equality before the law"-- Justice Chas. Evans Hughes
My nephew was born/raised in Ridgecrest/China Lake. when he was a Jr; all his friends were a year ahead. He took the GED & sterted to college. went a couple semester to jr college in RC, then went to Cal-Riverside. Went all thru @ Riverside (except one year @ UCSB) & obtained a Phd in English.
Now he's a full prof. in WI.
so he must've taken GED @ 17. this would've been in 1981.
i'm not sure if there's a point in here.
Most successful GED people who are in here basically proved my point. It's only of a benefit if they are jumping right into college and pursuing higher academics. Granted, the public education system is serving up garbage And if a kid is smater than the gardbage education then get out and go to college.
Of the people with GED's that I've met who wanted a fire or police career, all said they wished they would have stayed in school.
What year did the US claim independence from Great Britain...
Overall 58% of total polled knew it was 1776
Only 31% of those under 30 knew the answer...
80% of those 60 and older knew the correct answer...
http://maristpoll.marist.edu/71-inde...-seventy-when/
9th grade dropout here. GED in the Army when I was 17 (North Carolina).
Community college, then U of Arizona, U of Phoenix, U of Central OK (BS), and finally OU (MHR). It might not have been the best/most traditional route, but my parents never spent a dime on my education, I never spent a dime on my education, and my degrees are in areas that I'm interested in. Also, I never had to do the whole gay-assed dorm living/greek thing and for that, I am truly thankful.