<p>Would a college accept it if I was able to get the EPGY courses integrated into my high school transcript? </p>
<p>Sent from my SCH-I535 using CC</p>
<p>Would a college accept it if I was able to get the EPGY courses integrated into my high school transcript? </p>
<p>Sent from my SCH-I535 using CC</p>
<p>“Can you elaborate a little more on the dual enrollment?
How would I get my high school credits if I didn’t go to high school whatsoever?
Are most college courses in the morning or after school?”</p>
<p>It’s <em>dual</em> enrollment, so you get high school credits for the classes you take at the college. They can go toward your HS graduation requirements, but they’re considered college credits too.
From what I’ve seen looking at class schedules, most college courses are in the morning to mid-afternoon, though there are evening/night classes too. A lot of times a class will be offered at more than one time so you can pick whatever works best. </p>
<p>“Would a college accept it if I was able to get the EPGY courses integrated into my high school transcript?”</p>
<p>I still don’t know what colleges would think (probably depends on the college), but getting high school credit for the EPGY courses would keep your class rank from getting too low due to lack of credits. If your school weights grades and these aren’t weighted, that could hurt you, though.</p>
<p>when you say that you receive high school for the college courses, are they weighted as well?
What if I need to take language arts and at the high school?</p>
<p>“when you say that you receive high school for the college courses, are they weighted as well?”</p>
<p>Depends on your school. </p>
<p>“What if I need to take language arts and at the high school?”</p>
<p>You could probably take a college English class in lieu of it.
However, at my school it’s hard to use dual enrollment credits to complete graduation requirements because each college class is only worth 0.6 of a high school credit to them. So you might have to take two college English classes for one HS credit, which is why I suggested using next year and probably junior year to complete your high school graduation requirements in other subjects before taking dual enrollment.</p>