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MACRO guidelines suggest that a community college should retain these transcripts for a minimum of one year after the term in which you applied if you do not enroll. Otherwise, it should retain them for a minimum of five years after your graduation or last date of attendance.
College transcripts don't expire. However, are you going to a different college than where you screwed up? If you're at a new school and didn't transfer any credits, you can probably just provide your current transcript.
Acquire your high school transcripts. Remember, these are permanent records. They never expire.
MACRO guidelines suggest that a community college should retain these transcripts for a minimum of one year after the term in which you applied if you do not enroll. Otherwise, it should retain them for a minimum of five years after your graduation or last date of attendance.
There is a national college clearinghouse in the US that has records of all post-high school institutions attended. If you fail to report it, transcript certification will be markedly delayed.
In reality, college credits never expire. Once you've completed the course, and passed, you'll always have that achievement and knowledge. Even in cases where your coursework is 10, 20, or even 30 years old, it's possible to be rewarded for your old college credit.
In reality, college credits never expire. Once you've completed the course, and passed, you'll always have that achievement and knowledge. Even in cases where your coursework is 10, 20, or even 30 years old, it's possible to be rewarded for your old college credit.
In reality, college credits never expire. Once you've completed the course, and passed, you'll always have that achievement and knowledge. Even in cases where your coursework is 10, 20, or even 30 years old, it's possible to be rewarded for your old college credit.
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