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How would you like for the first two years of college to be integrated to High School? There could be many ways of doing this but one that I could think of is just having one or two (optional) additional year(s) of High School that could grant you an associate's degree in say General Engineering/General Business Management/General Science.
Doing this could prepare all our children to have a better idea of what they want to do with their lives and at the same time reduce the already TOO-HIGH cost of Education.
Actually they already do that here in this town. At Southern Utah Univeristy the high school is on campus and the kids attend thier high school and actual college classes. They come out with(Success Academy) an associates degree I beleive emphasis in math and science.
How would you like for the first two years of college to be integrated to High School? There could be many ways of doing this but one that I could think of is just having one or two (optional) additional year(s) of High School that could grant you an associate's degree in say General Engineering/General Business Management/General Science.
Doing this could prepare all our children to have a better idea of what they want to do with their lives and at the same time reduce the already TOO-HIGH cost of Education.
What do you think?
Isn't that the purpose of 2 year community colleges?
Yes, where I live high school seniors can take classes that give them both college credits and credits for high school graduation. Good idea (IMHO)
However, -------there is no free lunch
Many K-12 school districts are already short of money and many property tax payers are maxed out.
Originally posted by antreidi
How would you like for the first two years of college to be integrated to High School? There could be many ways of doing this but one that I could think of is just having one or two (optional) additional year(s) of High School that could grant you an associate's degree in say General Engineering/General Business Management/General Science.
Doing this could prepare all our children to have a better idea of what they want to do with their lives and at the same time reduce the already TOO-HIGH cost of Education.
What do you think?
Actually, I work in such a school in North Carolina. Personally I think it's a great idea--although at my school, the students have to apply, so it's not open to all. Still, it's a great concept that attracts driven kids (more or less)
I don't think it would work because of it would be two more years taxpayers have to pay for (assuming it is public), and I wouldn't really want to have 6 years of high school-just seems too long.
I don't think it would work because of it would be two more years taxpayers have to pay for (assuming it is public), and I wouldn't really want to have 6 years of high school-just seems too long.
I agree .
When funding for K-12 is a problem , why expand it ?
I homeschool my children, and I expect that by the time they are 18, they will have completed a year or two of community college (or an apprenticeship/tech school/etc, depending on what their goals are). For those on the college track, I think it's a great idea. I don't think it should be required, though.
Yeah...where is the money for this going to come from? And I'll echo the other person who said that the whole point of community colleges is just what you describe. (And I was able to take as many CC classes as I wanted in high school).
So from me, it's an emphatic no. There's a lot of stuff that needs fixed with our current education system, but adding more years to it isn't going to help.
How would you like for the first two years of college to be integrated to High School? There could be many ways of doing this but one that I could think of is just having one or two (optional) additional year(s) of High School that could grant you an associate's degree in say General Engineering/General Business Management/General Science.
Doing this could prepare all our children to have a better idea of what they want to do with their lives and at the same time reduce the already TOO-HIGH cost of Education.
What do you think?
I think that students who are capable should be able to take college courses during high school as they do in my area now. There is no point in making a student who is clearly capable of much more to sit through classes and yawn - they need challenge IMHO.
That said, one of the reasons that this is being piloted in my state is because of the need for remediation in Language Arts and Mathematics. This causes me to question why. In a sense, for me, it's a rhetorical question as I am seeing why there is a need for remediation everytime I sit at the kitchen table with my elementary/middle school students and help them with their homework.
I'd be in favor of competency or skill building in highschool.
-Like entrepreneurial classes (perhaps taught in combination with mechinical/technical trade). So kids can open up their own custom bike shop, or have the skills to open up a trade business after they turn 18 or 21.
Probably 25-30% of a typical highschool is filled with kids who would be good with their hands and would do well in a technical trade. No reason to group them all in a college bound track.
-Another 15-20% of a typical highschool could be doing much more advanced work. College level, or maybe even graduate level. But the bar is set too low in a typical highschool, and they're either bored, or not challenged enough. Maybe offer higher level classes in grades 11 and 12. And let those count towards college. And give them some kind of special credits for having completed them.
-Maybe let others do college work in the summer or winter. Maybe they'll find their passion or interest earlier. The system now is too block like and homogeneous. Let kids advance ahead of others in highschool, if they're willing to do the work and have the aptitude.
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