<p>I'm trying to find a summer program where high school students can take real college classes alongside college students. I know Georgetown has a program like this called Summer College for High School Students. Are there any other similar programs?</p>
<p>tons -- brown, harvard, boston university, georgetown, university of chicago, johns hopkins, and tons more.</p>
<p>just do some searching on google with the terms "summer high school" and the name of a school</p>
<p>Check out all of the UCs, especially if you live in California. I went to the one at Berkeley last summer.</p>
<p>Look for anything with -Insert school name here- Summer Session.</p>
<p>Cornell has one.</p>
<p>William and Mary!</p>
<p>You can also just take courses at your local college. I took 9 credits at Rutgers last summer and that wasn't a program. I was considered a normal, part time student.</p>
<p>Really? How do you enroll in Rutgers (as a current high school student)?</p>
<p>Harvard, Yale, Columbia (there are 2 programs- one for credit and one for high school. Make sure to pick the right one), Stanford, MIT has a bunch, but I don't know if they're for credit, UPenn, JHU, NYU... A bunch of schools have them. I don't think the LACs do, but almost everyone else does, I think.</p>
<p>Isn't Cornell's summer program TASP?</p>
<p>Or do they have another, less prestigious one?</p>
<p>Cornell has one for credit. Tasp isn't for credit. It's a different ballgame.</p>
<p>Iriseyes, my original post regarded taking REAL college classes alongside REAL college students, as a high school student durnig the summer. TASP is much different - it simply is not what is being discussed.</p>
<p>Many of the posters are making this seem so obvious, and I'm happy if it really is so wide spread -- but I'm not asking about summer programs where a bunch of high schoolers take a college class. I'm wondering about a college class at, for example, Harvard, in which a regular full time Harvard professor teaches to Harvard students, but just like sometimes students from other universities take classes at a different school over the summer, high school students are allowed to partake. Of course these would be for full credit, as they are regular college classes. Is this scenario the case at the universities listed by other posters on this thread?</p>
<p>yeah. .</p>
<p>Yes, many colleges allow high school students to enroll in their summer School sessions with a recommendation from their GC. They do tend to limit which level/type of classes HS students can take but once in the class, there is no difference betwen you and the college student next to you. GOOGLE the schools you are interested in and look on their websites for summer school schedules. Once there, look for registration/applications for current HS students. A lot of universities allow high school students to register for summer school classes.</p>
<p>op:</p>
<p>the programs that have been mentioned offer real college classes to high schoolers. For example, check out Cornell summer college and you'll see a few classes designed specifically for high schoolers, but with a Cornell transcript, AND you can also pick from any of their summer course offerings to regular Cornell students. The UCs also offer a full summer slate, of which high schoolers can join -- no OOS tuition.</p>
<p>Note, however, that some summer courses are taught not by regular faculty, but by visiting profs. This has nothing to do with the fact that high schoolers are taking the class, but rather, some full-time colllege faculty take the summer off to vacation and/or do research.</p>
<p>The summer honors program at BU rocked. You're taught by the prof's that teach there during the reg. year....awesome experience.</p>
<p>Brown, Carnegie Mellon and Harvard are a few that I know about.</p>
<p>Yea I took math classes at Villanova that tranferred as full credits and were ridiculously easy. I was definitely the only hs student in Diff Eq hahahaha. Community colleges let you do this too but it won't transfer as well usually. Just Google like everyone else has been saying and you will find at least one school in your area that will let you register as a high school student but take real summer session classes.</p>