CLEP exams allow college students to earn credit for college courses. We can prepare them by providing course study guides, practice questions, and direction to the best resources on the internet.
About CLEP
Credit by Exam is a way to earn real college credits, and potentially save thousands of tuition dollars. By passing tests offered by The College Board, which administers College Level Examination Program (CLEP) exams in math, history, science and many other subjects. Anyone interested in earning college credit and saving time and money can take a CLEP exam.
The Principles of Microeconomics exam covers material that is usually taught in a one-semester undergraduate course in introductory microeconomics, including economic principles that apply to the behavioral analysis of individual consumers and businesses.
Students who earn course credit through CLEP perform as well as or better in sequent or subsequent courses than their non-CLEP classmates who took the introductory course at the institution.
What Can CLEP Talk do for You?
- Use our mini-course structure to prepare quickly and efficiently through “bite-sized” modules.
- CLEP Talk has the content and resources so you don’t have to search and piece together content from across the internet.
- Cut straight to what you need to know with CLEP Talks’ course study guides and stop wasting time.
- CLEP Talk offers practice using CLEP-level questions so you can be comfortable and prepared for the CLEP exam.
- CLEP Talk offers a variety of questions so you won’t be caught off guard in the test and know what to expect.
- By achieving a passing score on the CLEP exam you can earn the equivalent college credits – no semester of classes required.
Get studying Today
CLEP exams must be scheduled. The good thing is we don’t. Enroll your student today and they can begin studying now.
Inside the Mini-Course
Take a look at the outline for the CLEP Talk Course content. The lecture topics below are laid out in easy-to-view study guides. After completion of the topics we offer a series of practice questions in groups of ten. A way to study in bite-sized increments.