Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't get the appeal of this program. It costs money so doesn't actually save on tuition.
There are an awful lot of people commenting here who know nothing about the program. Or maybe it's just one ignorant person with too much time on her hands.
The cost of the Northwood program over 4 years is about $7,000.
The cost of MC for two years is about $13,000. Tuition if those two years were spent at UMCP would be about $20,000 plus the room and board you would be saving for two years is probably another 20k.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get the appeal of this program. It costs money so doesn't actually save on tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lets not get worked up, really how many kids form Northwood make it to college let alone Yale
And how many Northwood grads do you know?? I don't know many but I live in the catchment and every one I do know has gone to college. No surprises, I know them through their parents who also went to college. But it's true the student I know who is at Yale went through a magnet, didn't stay at the home school, but is a product of the feeder ES, so it's all good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't get the appeal of this program. It costs money so doesn't actually save on tuition.
My son would rather be in college classes than HS classes and I don't care how much it costs.
Anonymous wrote:lets not get worked up, really how many kids form Northwood make it to college let alone Yale
Anonymous wrote:I don't get the appeal of this program. It costs money so doesn't actually save on tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Here we go: Harvard will NOT give credit for dual enrollment classes counted for credit towards a high school diploma. https://college.harvard.edu/admissions/application-process/transferring-harvard-college/transfer-credits
It's quite possible that Harvard will still accept a dual enrollment graduate if that graduate has taken the most challenging course of study offered at his/her high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yale requires that high school students enrolled as Dual Enrollment students apply as freshmen. https://admissions.yale.edu/transfer-details
The Northwood students applied to UMD as freshmen too, not transfer students. How they apply is a separate question from how many credits ultimately count toward their degree.
But feel free to keep spitballing.
Anonymous wrote:Yale requires that high school students enrolled as Dual Enrollment students apply as freshmen. https://admissions.yale.edu/transfer-details