<p>Are there any above average/good/excellent colleges where it is possible to graduate in two years from? Assuming i have straight 7's on IB tests. I was looking in the new england area or texas. thx.</p>
<p>That all depends on the number of IB tests you take & pass, the amount of credit the college will award for a certain test, the maximum number of credits they will allow you to enroll with, and the gen ed & major requirements.</p>
<p>Why do you want to rush through anyways?</p>
<p>I don't think any accredited 4-year college will let you graduate in 2 years. You'd have to have credit for 16 college classes or more, which is impossible, and even then good colleges have other requirements. The best you can do at a good college is graduate a year early.</p>
<p>Most of the time, there's a minimum credit limit and a maximum credit transfer limit. You can technically graduate in 2 years from NYU, but it's usually not recommended. Here it's 32 credits in max, and 128 minimum to graduate. So you have to take 96 credits at NYU.</p>
<p>You may be able to do it with multiple summer and winter semesters.</p>
<p>Most of the time that's not possible; at BC you need 38 classes to graduate (5/semester except senior year), so even if you transfered a lot of credits over it's probably not possible to graduate within 2 years. The earliest I've heard of is 3 years; a lot of the premeds do that.</p>
<p>If you take like 18 hours every semester, plus have at least a semester's worth of credit coming in, and take a full-load every summer too... then maybe. But why would you want to?</p>
<p>porque?</p>
<p>;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;</p>
<p>por que i have to do more than a decade of graduate studies cause i want to be a neurosurgeon :) </p>
<p>thx for your help guys/girls</p>
<p>It is <em>possible</em> at many schools to graduate in 2 years (or even 1 theoretically) if you took A LOT of dual enrollment coursework in HS. In such chases, you are simply treated as a junior or senior transfer. Typically the residency requirement at a school allows for senior-level transfers so you can certainly transfer 60-90 units if they fulfill the right requirements...of course, transfers rarely find it as smooth a ride as they had hoped...</p>
<p>
[quote]
por que i have to do more than a decade of graduate studies cause i want to be a neurosurgeon
[/quote]
If that's your reason, then trying to graduate in 2 years is an incredibly bad idea. Your plan is not realistic or smart in the least. Not trying to be mean, just honest. Check out the Premed forum for more info.</p>
<p>it is possible. i mean look at doogie howsard or whatever his name is...</p>
<p>I have to do 3 years of graduate studies because I want to be a lawyer. And yes, I may be suing you sirajoman lol. But I'm still staying in college for 3 years.</p>
<p>i can graduate in 2.5 yrs but choose to do so in 3.</p>
<p>what you do is take a full load every semester, take summer school, and do ap/ib during highschool.</p>
<p>don't change your major and have your school you are in mind mapped out with what classes you need to take and follow to it strictly.</p>
<p>i came into college are a second semester sophomore. what really helped me was taking classes online, it's much easier and you can handle a bigger workload.</p>
<p>I don't think there are any good schools at which you can graduate in just 2 years - even with max course loads, and summer school, I don't think you can pull off all the requirements in that time period. Plus, your grades will suffer significantly so you'd be doing more harm then good.</p>
<p>But, if you're just asking because financially 4 years is super expensive..
if you go to a community college for like 2 years & finish all your gen. ed & prereqs THEN you can transfer to an accredited school that is above average & spend 2 years there until you graduate :)</p>
<p>the IB scores should cover most gen eds at a lot of schools</p>
<p>Be warned that some schools severely limit the number of AP/IB credits you can transfer...</p>
<p>There was a student at University of Virginia last year who graduated in one year. And he was coming out of HS.</p>