More choices, more pathways to affordable higher education

For the past dozen years, the GEO Foundation nonprofit has offered students enrolled at its high schools access to higher education through its college campus immersion program. A state grant for $8.3 million has allowed it to expand the program statewide.

A new study shows that the lines between K-12 and higher education are getting blurrier.

State of play:  The Community College Research Center found enrollment declined after the pandemic among all age groups except one: Those younger than 18. A growing share of high school students are participating in dual enrollment programs that allow them to earn college credit. Today, one in five community college students are high school students.

Why it matters: The cost of a college degree continues to rise. So do feelings of boredom among high school students. Getting an early start on a degree can make college less costly and offer high school students more relevant learning opportunities. Some students end up earning associate degrees when they receive their high school diplomas.

Yes, but: Despite the increase in popularity of dual enrollment across the nation, participation remains uneven among states. Idaho, which reported 40% of its high schoolers enrolled in dual enrollment, took the No. 1 spot, followed by Indiana, with 39%. Oregon had the lowest participation, with 8%. Florida reported 12%, which was below the national average of 18% during the fall of 2021.

Another way to play: Some states with lower dual enrollment participation rates reported higher participation in Advanced Placement courses, according to the College Board, which administers the AP program. Florida ranked second among the states, with nearly half of the class of 2022 taking an AP exam, another common path to earning college credit during high school.

Everyone wins: Regardless of what that looks like — AP, International Baccalaureate, Cambridge, dual enrollment, or career apprenticeship programs — students are finding new ways to gain affordable access to postsecondary education. Some schools, like the Indiana-based charter network GEO Academies or Florida’s collegiate high schools, have designed their models around giving students access to higher education institutions or postsecondary career training.


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BY Lisa Buie

Lisa Buie is managing editor for NextSteps. The daughter of a public school superintendent, she spent more than a dozen years as a reporter and bureau chief at the Tampa Bay Times before joining Shriners Hospitals for Children — Tampa, where she served for five years as marketing and communications manager. She lives with her husband and their teenage son, who has benefited from education choice.

One Comment

The whole point of baccalaureate colleges is to qualify students for university. These qualifications are legally required in educationally leading states like Switzerland, where every university student has passed the equivalent of five AP exams, unlike the United States, where a like number (around a third) have taken one AP exam, which around two-fifths fail. These data depict how far behind the average American student is by age 18, compared with their peers in Europe and elsewhere. Therefore better educated regions, including greater Montreal in North America, require college education before admitting & subsidizing pseudo-students into universities, from which millions of American young adults drop out, but not before falling thousands of dollars into non-dischargeable debt, from which they have to beg old men like Biden and Trump for relief (which means they try to transfer their debt onto the backs of unsuspecting taxpayers, since debt cannot be cancelled by those that are themselves debtors).

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