<p>I just checked the website and it appears the policy for dual enrollment has changed.</p>
<p>"
Effective January 3, 2013, high school students who dually enroll for courses at accredited institutions of higher education may receive credit for work taken at these institutions for courses that have been recognized for transfer to the University of Michigan in accordance with the Universitys transfer credit policy.Acceptance of courses and credits deemed suitable for transfer to the University of Michigan is determined by faculty in the department, school, or college responsible for instruction in the subject area. Among factors influencing the determination of acceptability are accreditation status, comparable academic quality, and the relationship of the course to other course offerings in the primary administrative unit and other academic units at the University of Michigan, and the basis for student performance evaluation in the course.</p>
<p>Credit is not awarded when a course enrollment consists only of high school students.</p>
<p>To receive transfer credit for Dual Enrollment, students must have an official college/university transcript sent to the College of Engineering Recruitment and Admission office. The address is:</p>
<p>"</p>
<p>Before it seems like you needed to fill out a form, found here.
<a href="http://www.engin.umich.edu/ugadmissions/transfercredit/CoEDualEnrollmentForm.pdf%5B/url%5D">http://www.engin.umich.edu/ugadmissions/transfercredit/CoEDualEnrollmentForm.pdf</a></p>
<p>"There are two instances when dual enrollment courses cannot transfer. Credit is not awarded when a course enrollment consists only of high school students, and/or when a course is used to complete high school graduation requirements. Only list course below that ARE transferable please."</p>
<p>So previously you needed the classes to not count towards graduation requirements. So if you needed 23 credits to graduate and have 24 you can only transfer 2 classes. And if your high school required you to take a specified number of math courses only the extra courses would count. </p>
<p>So let me make sure, now people can transfer as many courses as they want? It seems strange that they'll let people transfer so many courses. During high school I took 12 dual enrollment classes. If I wasn't going into engineering I would have had a ton of credits racked up. I guess this also means my AP Calc exam score no longer matters. I signed up to take the exam because I wanted my all the calc classes I took at my community college to transfer, but now it looks like that's going to happen anyway.</p>