<p>I am a prospective student (will be a senior this year), and I plan on applying to the School of Nursing. I am currently dually enrolled in both high school and college as an "early college" student. Early College is simply a better, revised form of the traditional dual enrollment. During my junior year and senior year, I take some classes at the high school, and the rest at the accredited community college. Will these dual enrollment credits transfer to the university? What if the courses were also used to meet graduation requirements and appear on my high school transcript? I have NOT taken any AP courses, but do they accept AP credit? Just wondering. Remember, these dual enrollment courses are taught on the campus (or online sometimes), classes are of mostly college students, and they are taught by faculty members (who often times hold a PhD in their field--more often than not). I know some schools have a bigger issue with this if the courses were taught in the high school, but that does not apply in my case. I know many schools (especially private) determine this transfer credit based on case by case evaluation. Please share any personal experiences you have had with this. Thanks :)</p>
<p>My son took advantage of the E-Lee College Academy program at his high school the past 2 years. Everything that went through the Community College was online. With AP & Online, he will have around 50 credits transfered to UNC this fall. There is a web site that will show the equivalencies. <a href=“https://www.unc.edu/sis/adm/xfereq.html[/url]”>https://www.unc.edu/sis/adm/xfereq.html</a>.</p>
<p>One note - not all classes that transfer are listed. Only the classes, that a student has transferred with before show up. My son did not have problems with AP credit, or concurrent credit with a local university. Most went (College Algebra did not). The problem is getting the credits to show up on connect carolina, it’s a continual battle to get it to show up, and show up correctly.</p>
<p>My S got credit for almost all of his dual enrollment and AP courses. Anything that satisfied a basic core requirement was awarded but specialty credit (Financial Accounting, Business law. etc.) was given as a general elective and he still needs to take through the business dept at UNC.</p>