B+ in a college course during the summer, should I put it on my high school transcript?

I will be a senior this fall and I just finished my really fast paced 6 week college course I took for dual-enrollment at a local university.
I took 2 college courses this summer. I took an Economics course and I received an A, but I got a B+ in Reading, Writing, and Inquiry 1 which is a composition course.

The courses will forever be on my college transcript but I have a choice to whether or not have my GC to put them on my high school transcript. My HS gives weighted credit to dual-enrollment courses. My weighted GPA is 3.7 so it will help my weighted GPA. However my unweighted GPA is 3.5 so it will slightly lower my unweighted GPA.

So should I put it on my HS transcript? I don’t need the credit for it because senior year I will be taking AP Literature and Composition. Note: My school does not offer AP Language and Composition. So if I include the college composition course I would have 5 years of English but most people just take 4 years…

How do you have a choice if it was a DE class?

@“Erin’s Dad”

Well I am asking just in case, the person in charge of the dual-enrollment program at the college said that she sends my grades to my high school’s registrar. However I talked with my high school’s registrar and she said that I have to show my grades to my GC for some reason?

So in the event I get to choose to have it affect my GPA, should I have it included into my GPA?

As stated above, I would think you have no choice in a dual-enrollment class.

I got a B in a college course, but my school does not put these courses and grades on our transcript. Ask your school about their policies.

I was going to ask for a transcript from the university and then show it to my GC. The dual-enrollment coordinator said she sends my grades to my high school regardless if I want to or not.

I know I probably might not get to choose, but I am just asking just in case of the rare chance I do.
Because who knows right? I just want to know just in case.