Posted: 6:00 a.m.
Sunday, Jan. 18, 2015
Pathways expand for early college credit
By http://www.journal-news.com/staff/jeremy-p-kelley/" rel="nofollow - - Hannah Poturalski
Staff Writers
A week after President Barack Obama called
for access to free community college nationwide, state officials are trying to
draw attention to an already-available Ohio
program that lets high school students earn college credit for free.
Both
initiatives are aimed at giving more students access to college at a time when
rising tuition closes doors to some families, or forces students to prop those
doors open via heavy debt loads.
G. Michael Pratt, associate provost and
dean of Miami University Regionals, said Obama’s proposal for free community
college is “highly speculative” at this time. He said there remains a lot of
unknowns about the program and whether it will move forward.
“We’d be concerned opening up a program
like this might just shift existing students from their first two years at
regionals or four-year colleges to a community college,” Pratt said.
Pratt said he’s also concerned the plan for
free community college could impact students on federal pell grants. But Pratt
said one positive from the plan could be more students earning associate
degrees and wanting to stay in school to complete a bachelor’s degree.
“It could be beneficial in the long run,”
Pratt said.
But
while the president’s proposal is in its infancy — with no guarantee it will
survive a legislative debate — Ohio’s College Credit Plus program became law in
June, and has a fast-approaching April 1 deadline for students to opt-in for
next fall’s classes.
“Under College Credit Plus, the state will
pay for public high school students’ college as long as they’re eligible,” said
Lauren McGarity, director of special projects for the Ohio Board of Regents.
“One of the best arguments for students and parents is, the more college
courses you take while in high school (under CCP), the more dollars you’ll
save.”
Ohio public school districts and public
colleges are required by law to offer College Credit Plus starting this fall,
and private high schools and colleges can choose to opt-in, according to the
Ohio Department of Education. The private school model may require the student
to shoulder some cost, but significantly less than they would on a traditional
college path.
Dirk Allen, director of admissions at Badin High School,
said the Catholic high school in Hamilton
has a positive view of the College Credit Plus program but still needs to get
more information on how it will work.
“We hope to be involved but we still have
to get a lot more information,” Allen said.
College Credit Plus will replace the
state’s existing early credit programs — the Post Secondary Enrollment Option
(PSEO), where students travel to a college to take classes, and dual-enrollment
alternatives, where students take classes for college credit at their high
school, online, or under some other local arrangement.
DeAnn Hurtado, associate dean of the
Sinclair Community College Courseview Campus in Mason, said as a parent of two
college students herself, both of whom earned early credits in high school, she
knows the importance and cost savings that can come from getting a head start on
college.
“It’s nice to avoid some of the costs of
the first year,” Hurtado said.
Hurtado said the goal of College Credit
Plus is to create a structured way for families and students to easily access
and understand the college-credit opportunities available to them.
“The existing programs are not very well
publicized and easy to understand for families,” Hurtado said. “This simplifies
the system for people to take advantage of.”
CCP will offer the same flexibility of
location, but with more standardized rules than the current system, which
McGarity said could “make you pull your hair out.”
But while CCP will offer more availability
everywhere, it comes with one important, tougher requirement. It is a true
dual-enrollment program that requires the student to apply to, and be accepted
by an Ohio
college in order to simultaneously earn high school and college credit.
Students can apply to a college in any grade from 7-12.
That’s one piece that has local high
schools and colleges sweating, because college admission standards for CCP
students, many of whom may be halfway through high school, are still being
worked on.
University of Dayton officials declined to comment for this
story, saying the admissions department was still studying the matter.
“It’s really important to get information
out to the students, and get everyone working together, because this is a
really tight deadline for fall 2015,” said Thomas Sudkamp, Wright State’s
vice president for curriculum and instruction. Sudkamp said people are in
“panic mode,” adding that setting up the admission standards is the biggest
current challenge.
Marianne Cotugno, faculty director at Miami
University Middletown, said it’s her understanding that CCP students would have
to reapply to attend the university full time after graduating high school.
“We’ve long been involved with offering
college credit,” Cotugno said. “We have good existing relationships with
districts.”
Cotugno said this past fall there were 483
students completing PSEO at the regional campuses, and another 86 in
dual-enrollment courses at Warren County Career Services and in Centerville.
Cotugno said the university already
practices many of the requirements of College Credit Plus, including classroom
observations and assigning advisers to the high school students.
Keith Millard, assistant superintendent of
instruction for Hamilton City Schools, said each year there are between 125 and
150 students in the district gaining college credit through advanced placement
classes and dual credit and post secondary enrollment options with Miami
University Hamilton and Clark
State Community
College.
“It helps families and Ohio needs more citizens in the state
earning college degrees,” Millard said.
Under
the new College Credit Plus umbrella, “districts will be absorbing more costs,”
Millard said. Previously students paid a determined amount per credit hour for
dual enrollment, and districts paid the cost for post secondary. Now districts
will cover both costs.
But tuition costs will be negotiated
between the college and public school district, with an established a floor of
$40 and ceiling of $160 per credit hour.
The student perspective
While the details of the program are
changing, Ohio
high school students have been earning college credit for years.
Fairfield High School senior Brenden
O’Brien said he’s currently earning college and high school credit for the
English course he’s taking. His college credit is through Cincinnati State.
“It’s challenging but it’s fun
challenging,” O’Brien said. “I don’t mind working that much harder in high
school to make it easier next year.”
O’Brien said he was attracted to the
dual-credit course after finding out from his high school teacher it would be
more writing focused than reading.
“I enjoy writing; I can show what’s
creative, what’s on my mind,” O’Brien said.
The 18-year-old Fairfield resident said he plans to attend
college in the fall to study engineering. He’s gotten a couple letters of
acceptance but he’s waiting on a couple more before deciding.
Hurtado said colleges and universities will
be sending course catalogs to students in February. She said the courses are
typically in general education areas such as English, psychology, mathematics
and increasingly in engineering and business.
“If you take these classes in high school,
you’re better prepared in college to take the next-level class,” Hurtado said.
COLLEGE CREDIT PLUS
What: Eligible students can take college-level courses to earn
high school and college credit simultaneously.
Who: Ohio students in grades
7-12 who apply to a participating Ohio
college and are accepted.
Where: All Ohio
public school districts and public colleges must participate, and private
schools and colleges can opt-in. Courses can be taught at the college by
college professors, or at the high school by teachers who earn adjunct
professor status. Classes can also be taken online, if the college offers them
that way.
When: CCP takes effect for the 2015-16 school year. School
districts must offer information sessions explaining the program by March 1,
and students must declare their intention to participate by April 1.
Why: Ohio officials want more
college graduates, and they say this program — which replaces existing PSEO and
dual enrollment systems — will give more students inexpensive access to
college.
Cost: There is no cost to students if they are enrolled in an Ohio public college or
university. The high school and the college split the cost, which can range
from $40 to $160 per credit hour, well below standard college costs. Private
colleges that choose to participate will negotiate a cost within the $40 to
$160 window, and may charge the student some portion of that amount.
Sources:
Ohio Department of Education, Ohio
Board of Regents
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