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What is senioritis
You are guaranteed college credit if you pass the class.
They earn both high school and college credit
Check with your local community college. Some college's promote the dual enrollment program, and others do not. Either way, your local college should be happy to provide you with information about dual enrollment and the requirements of dual enrollment. :)
Concurrent enrollment
I got accepted for Fall 2010. These are the classes I took in my last 2 years: American History (Honors) English IV (Honors) Physics Chemistry AP Macroeconomics (3) AP Language/Comp (4) Sociology (Dual-enrollment) Religion (Dual-enrollment) Speech (Dual-enrollment) International Relations (Dual-enrollment) US Government (Dual-enrollment) Precalculus (Dual-enrollment) Trigonometry (Dual-enrollment) When I submitted my transcript to UF my GPA was 4.0 (unweighted) and 4.25 (weighted). I scored 1410/2110 on the SAT (730 Math, 680 Reading, 700 Writing). These aren't the best stats or the strongest courseload, but I think the 1 year of Dual Enrollment and the SAT score are what helped me the most.
James E. Gibbs has written: 'Dual enrollment in public and nonpublic schools' -- subject(s): Dual enrollment
The class enrollment increased by 3 students. This is the equivalent of 20%.
They earn both high school and college credit
An Associate's degree
enrollment
Assuming you are referring to your company health plan, open enrollment is your annual opportunity to change your benefit selections. Passive Open Enrollment means your benefits remain the same, even if you do not make a selection. Active Open Enrollment means you MUST make a benefit selection, even if your selection is "no coverage". Due to government legislation in the United States, you cannot change your benefit selections outside of the open enrollment period unless you have a "Qualifying Life Event".