| Surprised that nobody has asked OP which position OP's son plays. |
What makes you think a high acceptance rate will matter to a kid who's clearly not college material? |
| Alabama will take him. |
This is true. From the interwebs: The specific benchmarks are: English: A score of 18, linked to success in English Composition. Mathematics: A score of 22, linked to success in College Algebra. Reading: A score of 22, linked to success in Social Sciences courses. Science: A score of 23, linked to success in Biology. STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics): A score of 26, based on performance in first-year math and science courses for STEM majors. ELA (English Language Arts): A score of 20, based on performance in English Composition and social science courses. So a 20 for non-STEM and a 26 for STEM on average to be successful. |
Because they basically accept everyone? It’s not a trick statement. |
Nope. |
| Community college may be a good option for the first two years with small classes and more attention. |
Sure... but a 17 is 30th percentile, and you should not dismiss it with "he doesn't test well." Figure out where his deficits are and help him work on those, and spend less time worrying about the type of college that will admit him. This is pretty borderline preparation for college. From their website... "A college-ready ACT score is a benchmark indicating you have a good chance of succeeding in first-year college courses, with specific benchmark scores for each subject: English (18), Math (22), Reading (22), and Science (23)." |
Sorry, just saw that someone else posted these. |
NP here. Hey, PP, STFU |
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Sort of far from DMV but look into ASU. They have rolling admissions so you can get an answer early and their whole philosophy is that they have a place for every student from the honors college on down. They have been recognized for innovations. It was an option for my DC through they didn’t wind up going.
And I agree with other on just going test optional- plenty of schools are test optional and its not worth all the stress of prep amd tesys at that score range |
I agree |
| Look at Georgia College and State University if your kid might like a small town in the middle of Georgia. |
What resources do you have? What does your son really want to do? Does he work hard, complete work, do his best and get poor results, or does he have a terrible time finishing something? Or is he clearly a bright person who just has trouble with school? Does he seem interested in any skilled trades kinds of jobs? If you have plenty of money, he wants to go to college and he has special needs: Get a college counselor who can help him get into a college program for students with special needs. Go to seminars for parents of kids with special needs. Then come back and ask for advice on the special needs forum before you buy anything. If your son is a bright person with severe executive function problems: Understand that he has a severe invisible disability. Try to do whatever you can to get your son help with that disability and hope supports improve. If your son is just an ordinary good kid who’s not a rocket scientist: Look into things like trade schools, very career-oriented community college programs, the very least selective state colleges or, say, small private colleges that let everyone in. |
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