Home Local News RCC to Offer 14-Week Classes Beginning January 24

RCC to Offer 14-Week Classes Beginning January 24

While the weather hardly feels like spring, Richmond Community College is still accepting new students for Spring Semester. Pictured is the campus when the snow delayed the first day of classes on January 5. A 14-week session of classes begins January 24.
Photo courtesy of Richmond Community College.

HAMLET – Richmond Community College’s spring semester got off to a delayed start thanks to the “bomb cyclone” that brought major winter weather to Richmond and Scotland counties and up and down the East Coast.

The College is offering later starting sessions for anyone who missed the first day of classes but would like to enroll this spring semester. A session of 14-week classes will begin January 24.

“We offer a full schedule of classes in this later starting session, including many online classes,” Vice President for Instruction Kevin Parsons said. “Anyone who intended to sign up for classes spring semester and did not, now is the time to come to Student Services and get registered for these 14-week classes.”

Classes include business, economics, history, government, psychology, sociology, art, music, drafting, electrical, industrial, HVAC, nurse aide, physics, Spanish, welding and more.

Classes are offered in both Richmond and Scotland County. Along with traditional classes, RCC has expanded its online offerings. Students can now complete several degree programs 100 percent online, including Business Administration, Law Enforcement, Courts and Correction, Accounting Specialist and Nonprofit Manager.

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RCC’s Associate in Arts transfer degree is also now offered completely online, so students can easily complete their first two years of college at RCC from anywhere they have access to a computer and the Internet.

The College has also defined new transfer pathways to all 16 schools in the University of North Carolina system, as well as 20 other public or private universities in North Carolina.

Career and Transfer Center Director Patsy Stanley said the key to a smooth transition into these various pathways is figuring out exactly what RCC classes are needed to transfer into the baccalaureate program at the receiving university. Stanley has mapped out each transfer program’s pathway, starting with the first year at RCC to the fourth and final year at the university level.

New transfer pathways include the RCC-Appalachian State University Bachelor of Science – Criminal Justice degree, the RCC-UNC Charlotte Bachelor of Science – Computer Science degree, the RCC-NC State University Bachelor of Science – Mechanical Engineering degree, and the RCC-UNC Chapel Hill Bachelor of Arts – Psychology degree.

To register for the 14-week session beginning January 24, come to Student Services located on the main campus in Hamlet or the Honeycutt Center in Laurinburg. For more information, call (910) 410-1730 or visit www.richmondcc.edu.



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