dual enrollment

Anonymous
OP here. Our high school has agreements with various colleges. None of which are community colleges.

For example, French III is a DE class. You could get credit if you paid for it. Same for most of the upper-level math classes. Nothing on our high school transcript mentions or indicates DE.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My kid will have more than 60 community college credits, really closer to 80. None show up on the high school transcript. You just list them separately. He just took courses that weren't offered by the high school.


Rare to list them anywhere (unless it’s Pitt)…most schools don’t ask any courses to be listed. You just submit the transcripts.


Berkeley made us list them.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My kid will have more than 60 community college credits, really closer to 80. None show up on the high school transcript. You just list them separately. He just took courses that weren't offered by the high school.


Rare to list them anywhere (unless it’s Pitt)…most schools don’t ask any courses to be listed. You just submit the transcripts.


Berkeley made us list them.


2 examples = rare
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My kid will have more than 60 community college credits, really closer to 80. None show up on the high school transcript. You just list them separately. He just took courses that weren't offered by the high school.


Rare to list them anywhere (unless it’s Pitt)…most schools don’t ask any courses to be listed. You just submit the transcripts.


Berkeley made us list them.


2 examples = rare


NYU, Florida, Clemson, Rutgers, UCLA, UC San Diego, UC Irvine, Florida St., Florida, Temple, Virginia Tech, UMass, UCLA, etc. all require you to list community college classes attended. These colleges get over a million applications per year.

Not rare.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My kid will have more than 60 community college credits, really closer to 80. None show up on the high school transcript. You just list them separately. He just took courses that weren't offered by the high school.


Rare to list them anywhere (unless it’s Pitt)…most schools don’t ask any courses to be listed. You just submit the transcripts.


Berkeley made us list them.


2 examples = rare


NYU, Florida, Clemson, Rutgers, UCLA, UC San Diego, UC Irvine, Florida St., Florida, Temple, Virginia Tech, UMass, UCLA, etc. all require you to list community college classes attended. These colleges get over a million applications per year.

Not rare.


It’s still rare based on number of colleges out there and number of apps submitted to these schools (per person). My guess is it would be done 1 or 0 times for each kid’s submitted applications.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How exactly is dual enrollment recognized on a transcript? Both of my sons have taken classes where they were given the option of paying for dual enrollment credit. It is not indicated on their transcript at all. Essentially at hour school they take a course and then in some cases they take extra tests.


Is this a public school? If so, that's a troubling policy.


At FCPS if you take DE courses at GMU then you have to pay for them, as you should because GMU is not a public high school.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My kid will have more than 60 community college credits, really closer to 80. None show up on the high school transcript. You just list them separately. He just took courses that weren't offered by the high school.


Rare to list them anywhere (unless it’s Pitt)…most schools don’t ask any courses to be listed. You just submit the transcripts.


Berkeley made us list them.


2 examples = rare


NYU, Florida, Clemson, Rutgers, UCLA, UC San Diego, UC Irvine, Florida St., Florida, Temple, Virginia Tech, UMass, UCLA, etc. all require you to list community college classes attended. These colleges get over a million applications per year.

Not rare.


It’s still rare based on number of colleges out there and number of apps submitted to these schools (per person). My guess is it would be done 1 or 0 times for each kid’s submitted applications.


We listed them on eight out of ten applications so far this year. At a minimum they would be listed for every schools that uses STARS, which was the case for six of the schools DD applied to so far.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Our high school has agreements with various colleges. None of which are community colleges.

For example, French III is a DE class. You could get credit if you paid for it. Same for most of the upper-level math classes. Nothing on our high school transcript mentions or indicates DE.



It sounds like they aren't actually college level classes and not really worthy of college credit.
Anonymous
You need to request the transcript from the community college or college OP.
Anonymous
At our public school the school enters qualifying, eligible dual enrollment courses on to the HS transcript. And it counts in the GPA. Each of my 2 kids had one course like that.
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