Oops - looked back at your earlier post and saw that it’s because the CC doesn’t allow any more dual-enrollment after this semester. Are you and she happy with the list of schools that will allow the 11 credits? Because there are so many that don’t allow any, it could limit her options. If there’s any chance that might be the case, you could graduate her in June and in the meantime take online college courses dual-enrollment, or find another CC or local 4-year school that wouldn’t have the restriction the current one does.
Since you are only going to be a junior, you will have time to take a few SAT 2’s. I’d advise you to get as many scores and evaluations from those in official positions as possible.You want to be able to show mastery using evidence that will be accepted as showing expertise-in other words, evaluative indices from experienced, objective experts (or organizations). And the more the better. As many SAT 2’s as possible. AP exams, AMC/AIME results, NISSMA Scores, National academic contest results, awards from juried shows, etc. Obviously nobody has all of these! But I am listing them to give you examples of the many ways you can show that you have achieved mastery in various areas. There is no specified format or agreed upon number of such scores you should submit. The more objective evaluations, the better off you will be.
I have graduated 4 children from our homeschool. #5 is a jr. I issue grades for the classes I teach and I do so without hesitation. I expect a lot from my children, the best they are capable of producing, and their grades are earned. My kids have actually told me college is easier than my classes.
@fixingrocks I would confirm your 11hr info. Most schools do not require accredited diplomas and most consider any college classes taken after grad as the student being a transfer student. ( some are ok with courses taken after acceptance, like summer courses before fall enrollment.) If she is a competitive student, your path could reduce scholarship opportunities. What schools are you looking at that want an accredited diploma? There are a world of universities out there that do not require one.
OP, different universities expect different things. Many public universities (depends on the state) only want a transcript and test scores. That is all required. More competitive schools and programs want course descriptions and accomplishments beyond typical high school classes. I have children who fall in both categories. I have a couple who took standard high school courses. I also have a few very high-achieving children who have managed 300 level university courses in 11th and 12th grade and have lists of pretty astounding accomplishments. There are colleges and programs for both paths. The former students would not have been competitive for elite schools, but neither would they have thrived in an uber-competitive atmosphere. The latter students are not your typical teenagers and thrive on challenge and are internally motivated and driven. They seek opportunities and see obstacles as something you simply find a way to move, not a reason to turn around. The world is big enough for both types. You can succeed no matter which path you start out on. And one path does not mean you are on it forever. You can create a new path whenever you want.