<p>I'm taking my first two dual enrollment classes this year (Calculus-based Physics and Differential Equations), and I have grades of 98.5+ in both of them, which is pretty impressive for a high school student. As a homeschooled student, these are my first "real" grades (I have taken classes from external sources before, but never from a college), and they won't show up on my transcript for ED/EA colleges.</p>
<p>Would it be weird to list these grades unofficially in the additional information section of the Common Application?</p>
<p>That is impressive. Why not list them as your senior courses? </p>
<p>@AnEpicIndian: Sorry for any confusion: they are listed as senior-year courses, but the grades won’t show up on my transcript until late December. I can see unofficial grades from the online course shells, though.</p>
<p>Most colleges are going to require an interim report card from your guidance counselor - I would make sure that the grades are listed on part of that.</p>
<p>
Yes; they should be included in your mid-year report.</p>
<p>@Momof2back2back @skieurope: I’m only referring to ED/EA colleges in this case, and I won’t have official grades (or mid-year reports) from my dual enrollment classes until mid-December.</p>
<p>My umbrella program, which keeps track of my grades, doesn’t get any information about my current grades until mid-December either.</p>
<p>
Nor will anybody else. If your EA/ED schools want an unofficial update beforehand, they will ask for one.</p>