<p>I'm taking multivariable calc on epgy but I'm confused how I should report it on the UC application. I'm at the college courses taken part but it asks which college, should I just put Stanford even though technically I didn't physically go to Stanford? Please help!</p>
<p>Try searching under “Other High School”? Technically it’s not college.</p>
<p>Did you get college credit for the course? From Stanford? If so, put Stanford. If no credit, put it under summer activity or something. If some other college besides Stanford granted the credit, put that college.</p>
<p>[Frequently</a> Asked Questions](<a href=“http://epgy.stanford.edu/overview/faq.html#credits]Frequently”>http://epgy.stanford.edu/overview/faq.html#credits) suggests to me that you’d put “Stanford University Continuing Studies Program”</p>
<p>No, EPGY is not a college program and should not be treated as such. The program description is very specific - it is a precollege program, not a college program.</p>
<p>You would include EPGY under “High Schools” and list it as “Other - online.” The program name would be “Stanford University Education Program for Gifted Youth (EPGY).”</p>
<p>I guess you need to clarify which program because there’s an online high school as well as courses for Stanford college credit.</p>
<p>not necessarily, dodgers mom. EPGY offers both high school-level and college-level courses. EPGY now even provides a transcript (read the link in post #4).</p>
<p>btw: in the case of the OP, multi-variable calc is obviously a college-level course.</p>
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<p>Yes, it is . . . and it is made available to high school students through EPGY, a pre-college program. A number of private high schools I can think of also also offer multi-variable calc. Despite the complexity of the subject matter, when offered by a high school, it’s still a high school course.</p>
<p>AP courses are also supposed to be college-level. Does that mean they get listed on the uC app as college courses? Of course not.</p>
<p>The fact that Veddly took a college-level course is going to be apparent, regardless of where he lists it on his UC app. And the fact that it might entitle him to college credit is not going to make a whit of difference until such time as he’s actually admitted to college.</p>
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<p>Well not necessarily (such as dual enrollment or other special programs*), but regardless, EPGY is not a high school…</p>
<p>And, IMO, the correct posting in the app is as Ohiomom spells out in post 4. </p>
<p>*Our California public offers Calc thru an arrangement with Cal State; the teacher is a Cal State adjunct, but the course is taught on the HS campus, with only HS students. The students have the choice of whether they want to show the Calc course on their HS transcript. Of course, Cal State provides a transcript.</p>
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<p>I was unaware that EPGY restricted enrollment to only those pre-college…regardless, many Universities, including Cornell and Brown, offer “pre-college” programs targeted towards high schoolers but still provide bona fide college credit.</p>
<p>If you follow the link that OHMomof2 posted above, the heading for that page states that the program falls within the “Stanford Pre-Collegiate Studies” program. I’m just taking that statement at face value.</p>
<p>Brown, like several colleges, has two pre-college programs, one earns college credit (and is only open to rising and past seniors) and one doesn’t (is open to all high schoolers). If I were entering them on a college app I’d enter them differently depending which one it was. It seems like Stanford’s is similar in that respect.</p>
<p>Thank you everyone!</p>