Anonymous wrote:DD graduated TJ with 4 DE classes. We paid GMU about $2,000 for those. Her college didn't accept any of them because they only accept when a class is taught at college, not high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did not realize FCPS makes families pay for DE. So two kids take the exact same course, but only the one whose family has more disposable income gets college credit for it? Seems like a terrible arrangement.
DE Courses taken at an FCPS high school are provided at no cost to the student.
Concurrent courses (Independent Dual Enrollment) taken at a NOVA campus or through NOVA online require in-state tuition per NOVA’s Tuition & Fees.
The TJ course and grades didn't cost anything. To get the credit from George Mason cost a few hundred dollars if the student wanted that piece of paper - this was 2018.
So the policy is, all students take the class together. Then the rich kids get college credit for it, and the poor kids don’t.
That’s a bad policy.
Did you just recently learn that college in USA is not free?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did not realize FCPS makes families pay for DE. So two kids take the exact same course, but only the one whose family has more disposable income gets college credit for it? Seems like a terrible arrangement.
DE Courses taken at an FCPS high school are provided at no cost to the student.
Concurrent courses (Independent Dual Enrollment) taken at a NOVA campus or through NOVA online require in-state tuition per NOVA’s Tuition & Fees.
The TJ course and grades didn't cost anything. To get the credit from George Mason cost a few hundred dollars if the student wanted that piece of paper - this was 2018.
So the policy is, all students take the class together. Then the rich kids get college credit for it, and the poor kids don’t.
That’s a bad policy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did not realize FCPS makes families pay for DE. So two kids take the exact same course, but only the one whose family has more disposable income gets college credit for it? Seems like a terrible arrangement.
DE Courses taken at an FCPS high school are provided at no cost to the student.
Concurrent courses (Independent Dual Enrollment) taken at a NOVA campus or through NOVA online require in-state tuition per NOVA’s Tuition & Fees.
The TJ course and grades didn't cost anything. To get the credit from George Mason cost a few hundred dollars if the student wanted that piece of paper - this was 2018.
So the policy is, all students take the class together. Then the rich kids get college credit for it, and the poor kids don’t.
That’s a bad policy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did not realize FCPS makes families pay for DE. So two kids take the exact same course, but only the one whose family has more disposable income gets college credit for it? Seems like a terrible arrangement.
DE Courses taken at an FCPS high school are provided at no cost to the student.
Concurrent courses (Independent Dual Enrollment) taken at a NOVA campus or through NOVA online require in-state tuition per NOVA’s Tuition & Fees.
The TJ course and grades didn't cost anything. To get the credit from George Mason cost a few hundred dollars if the student wanted that piece of paper - this was 2018.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid took multivariable calculus which was taught by a TJ teacher at TJ. Kids had the choice to pay for dual enrolment credit with George Mason.
The final exam for the course was the George Mason paper, which was way easier than any of the tests during the school year, and raised her final grade significantly.
Academic rigor at TJ is comparable to that of at top STEM universities/colleges, not that of GMU/NVCC. Putting aside the tiny few DE students, GMU/NVCC exist to serve the vast majority of average students who do not want to be subjected to harvard/mit or even T100 like rigor. If GMU/NVCC starts enforcing TJ like rigor, then they would be discouraging its vast student population from continuing there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did not realize FCPS makes families pay for DE. So two kids take the exact same course, but only the one whose family has more disposable income gets college credit for it? Seems like a terrible arrangement.
DE Courses taken at an FCPS high school are provided at no cost to the student.
Concurrent courses (Independent Dual Enrollment) taken at a NOVA campus or through NOVA online require in-state tuition per NOVA’s Tuition & Fees.
Anonymous wrote:My kid took multivariable calculus which was taught by a TJ teacher at TJ. Kids had the choice to pay for dual enrolment credit with George Mason.
The final exam for the course was the George Mason paper, which was way easier than any of the tests during the school year, and raised her final grade significantly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid took multivariable calculus which was taught by a TJ teacher at TJ. Kids had the choice to pay for dual enrolment credit with George Mason.
The final exam for the course was the George Mason paper, which was way easier than any of the tests during the school year, and raised her final grade significantly.
Academic rigor at TJ is comparable to that of at top STEM universities/colleges, not that of GMU/NVCC. Putting aside the tiny few DE students, GMU/NVCC exist to serve the vast majority of average students who do not want to be subjected to harvard/mit or even T100 like rigor. If GMU/NVCC starts enforcing TJ like rigor, then they would be discouraging its vast student population from continuing there.
Anonymous wrote:My kid took multivariable calculus which was taught by a TJ teacher at TJ. Kids had the choice to pay for dual enrolment credit with George Mason.
The final exam for the course was the George Mason paper, which was way easier than any of the tests during the school year, and raised her final grade significantly.
Anonymous wrote:I did not realize FCPS makes families pay for DE. So two kids take the exact same course, but only the one whose family has more disposable income gets college credit for it? Seems like a terrible arrangement.