<p>I know I could probably ask this elsewhere but I think I can get a more straightforward and accurate response from the PARENTS.</p>
<p>My daughter, 17, is a home-schooled junior. Part of her curriculum at home is studying for the CLEP exams (she has passed 2 so far) and she just finished 2 Dual Enrollment classes at the local community college here (Florida) a month ago. </p>
<p>Now she has begun taking 1 DE class at the local college (paid by the state) and 2 online classes at an out-of-state institution, paid by us. She is a registered as a transient student at the out-of-state school. Total: 3 college level classes, all ending by July 30th.</p>
<p>When August returns daughter will be a SENIOR and she will resume taking 2 DE classes, per semester, at the local community college. She is intending to apply in September to her top choice, an "away" university in our state, for admission in fall 2011.</p>
<p>My question: I know the the credits my daughter is earning at the o-o-s community college are accepted by our state university system. However, because my daughter is not a full-time college student, will these summer college credits my daughter is taking NOW be accepted by the university when she enters it in 2011? </p>
<p>Or do you have to be already enrolled in an institution (as a full-time college student) to have summer, transient credits count for anything?</p>
<p>It seems I have read more than once that quite a few high school students--juniors and seniors--take summer college courses, and once they enter their university of choice (over ayear later, if they are juniors), they are awarded credit for those summer classes. A Texan junior might go to summer school at Colombia, earn a half dozen credits, and then apply those credits to his transcript once he begins attending UT Austin, for example. </p>
<p>Can someone clarify this for me? Thanks!</p>