A new partnership between St. Charles Community College and University of Missouri-St.
Louis will put business administration students on the right track to earn a bachelor's
degree from UMSL.
Under a new articulation agreement, UMSL will award SCC business students college
credits for courses they have completed toward their associate's degrees.
In addition to making the transfer process seamless for students, officials from both
colleges said the agreement will also increase enrollment and graduation rates.
“I'm excited about this,” said Steven Oberg, business administration chair at SCC. “This is probably one of our most significant agreements to date because
of our proximity and our relationship with UMSL.”
Oberg said that there are several hundred SCC students who have declared business
administration as their major and could benefit from the credit transfer agreement.
“We already have a lot of students who transfer to UMSL, and we hope that number will
increase with this agreement because it gives them a clear pathway to a four-year
degree,” he said.
Michael Elliott, associate dean of the UMSL College of Business Administration, said the articulation agreement ensures that 64 credit hours taken at SCC will transfer
to the business administration degree program at UMSL.
“It will help students to take the correct courses at SCC to maximize their transfer
credits and best prepare them for their junior and senior level classes at UMSL,”
Elliott said. “Additionally, steering students away from courses they don't need or
that won't transfer helps them to graduate in a timely and cost-effective manner.”
Elliott said the College of Business Administration accepts equivalency courses from
SCC because of the quality of their business administration coursework.
“Due to the rigor of SCC's courses, students are well prepared to take on the additional
challenge of those upper-level courses,” he said.
Oberg said the agreement will bring students to SCC and prepare them for their next
level of education at UMSL.
“It will serve to attract better students to our programs, which is a win for us,”
he said. “UMSL will be getting transfer students who have already proven that they
can finish something plus they're increasing their number of juniors and seniors.”