1 / 40

COLLEGE CREDIT NOW!

COLLEGE CREDIT NOW!. Technical College System of Georgia University System of Georgia Georgia Department of Education. FY 2012 Data Collections Conference August 17-19, Athens, GA . All the Programs Available for Dual Enrollment. Presenter Information. Gary Mealer Program Specialist

quasim
Télécharger la présentation

COLLEGE CREDIT NOW!

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. COLLEGE CREDIT NOW! Technical College System of Georgia University System of Georgia Georgia Department of Education FY 2012 Data Collections Conference August 17-19, Athens, GA All the Programs Available for Dual Enrollment

  2. Presenter Information Gary Mealer Program Specialist Transition Career Partnerships, JROTC Georgia Department of Education gmealer@doe.k12.ga.us 404-463-8197 http://doe.k12.ga.us/ci_cta.aspx?PageReq=CICTASeam

  3. http://www.gadoe.org/ci_cta.aspx?PageReq=CICTASeam

  4. Overview • What is College Credit Now? • Opportunities for High School Students • Dual Enrollment • Joint Enrollment • Articulated Credit • Move On When Ready • SPECIAL PROGAMS • Residential Academies • Early Colleges

  5. College Credit Now Dual Enrollment Residential Programs Joint Enrollment Move On When Ready Early Colleges Articulated Credit

  6. Benefits of College Credit Now • Increased high school completion • Expanded course offerings • Jump start on college completion • College preparedness • Less remediation • Job skill acquisition • Increased wages

  7. Dual Enrollment High School students take courses from a postsecondary institution while still enrolled as a high school student and receive credit at both the high school and postsecondary institution. Funding Options • ACCEL • FTE (including HB 186) • HOPE Grant • Student Self Pay

  8. Accel Eligibility Requirements • Residency • Public Colleges and Universities • Residency at USG and TCSG institutions is determined based on BOR or TCSG policies • 12 consecutive months immediately prior to the first day of classes of the school term for which Accel payment is sought • If a USG or TCSG institution grants an out-of-state tuition waiver to a student whose parent is stationed in Georgia, the student meets Georgia residency requirements. • No other out-of-state Tuition waivers granted by USG or TCSG institutions qualify a student for Accel eligibility Georgia Student Finance Commission – Giving Students Financial Choices since 1965

  9. Accel Eligibility • Eligible students must: • Be enrolled at an Eligible High School, including eligible/accredited Home Study Programs • Be admitted and enrolled as a Dual-Credit Enrollment student at an Eligible Postsecondary Institution • Meet application requirements by the end of the term for which the student is seeking Accel payment.

  10. Accel Eligibility, continued Eligible students: • Must not have already received a high school diploma or General Education Development (GED) Diploma. • Are limited to a maximum of 4 semesters of payment, regardless of the number of credits received during each semester. • Are limited to payment during the Fall and Spring semesters. • Accel is not available for Summer terms.

  11. Accel Changes • A student must abide by the rules of both the Eligible High School and the Eligible Postsecondary Institution. • Students may receive Accel payments for up to four semesters with a maximum of 15 credit hours during each semester. • The Accel Program award for public colleges and universities will cover tuition, HOPE-approved mandatory fees (which are capped at FY 2004 levels), and a book allowance.

  12. Accel Changes • A student who enrolls in Learning Support (remedial) coursework is ineligible for Accel payment for such coursework. • All hours funded by the Accel Program beginning with the Fall 2011 term are excluded from the 127 hour cap. Hours taken prior to Fall of 2011 will be included in the 127 semester or 190 quarter-hour HOPE credit hour cap. • The Accel Program award for private colleges and universities will be prorated based on an award of $3,600 per academic year. The per semester rate is $1,800 for full-time and $900 for half-time.

  13. Accel Course Directory

  14. Joint Enrollment High school students take courses at a postsecondary institution while still enrolled as a high school student and receive college credit only at the postsecondary institution. Funding Options • HOPE GRANT • Student Self Pay

  15. Articulated Credit An articulation agreement is established by institutions to aid in a seamless transition without repetition of coursework already mastered in high school. Student will successfully pass a designed assessment to receive credit at the postsecondary level.

  16. Early Colleges Engineering Early College at Maynard Jackson High School Savannah Early College Albany Early College Sumter County Schools-Georgia Southwestern Early College (SCS-GSW) Carver Early College Georgia College Early College (GCEC) Dekalb Early College Academy (DECA) Regional Early Admission for College Hopefuls (REACH) Early College Valdosta Early College Academy Early College Academy of Columbus (ECAC) Washington Early College Risley Early College Academy (RECA) http://www.gaearlycollege.org/ Early College is an intervention strategy for students who may not be well served by traditional high schools.

  17. Residential Programs Middle Georgia College University of West Georgia http://www.advancedacademy.org/ http://www.mgc.edu/academic/scimathenga/games/

  18. Move on When Ready High School Juniors and Seniors satisfy high school graduation requirements while enrolled full-time at a postsecondary institution. Funding Options • State FTE • An agreed set amount of $2,878will be used for payment to the postsecondary institution

  19. Who Authored The Bill? • Representative Jan Jones, House District 46 • Resides in Fulton County • Elected Speaker Pro Tem on January 11, 2010 • Member of Education committee for seven years • 2007 Policy Maker of the year by the Georgia Association of Career and Technical Education for funding vocational classrooms.

  20. ACCEL vsMOWR ACCEL MOWR • Must be full-time at the college • Academic, Electives and CTAE Courses • Hours do not count towards any HOPE caps • Funding comes from FTE money • Can be part-time or full-time at the college • Academic Courses only • NEW--Hours do not count toward HOPE paid hour cap • Funding is from state instead of lottery

  21. MOWR Participants 2010-2011 Georgia Institute of Technology Armstrong Atlantic State University Athens Technical Augusta Technical Georgia Perimeter College Atlanta Metropolitan College Chattahoochee Tech Georgia State University Bainbridge College DeKalb Gordon College Clayton State University Georgia Northwestern Kennesaw State University Columbus State University Middle Georgia Macon State College Dalton State College North Georgia South Georgia College College East Georgia College South Georgia Gainesville State College Southern Polytechnic State University Southern Crescent Georgia College and State University West Georgia Valdosta State University Wiregrass Technical Waycross College Georgia Gwinnett College

  22. WHO IS ELIGIBLE FOR MOWR? • High school juniors or seniors seeking a high school diploma from an eligible, public Georgia high school • Student reported as enrolled in a public school for funding purposes during the preceding October and March full-time equivalent (FTE) program counts • Student wishing to enroll full time in an eligible college, university or public technical college as a dual credit student taking approved college level courses.

  23. WHO IS NOT ELIGIBLE? • Students who are homeschooled • Students who transferred from out of state within last year* • Students who attend private school • Students who ARE NOT on track for graduation * Dependents of military members stationed in Georgia are eligible for MOWR

  24. Admission Requirements TCSG Test Scores - Degree Level Must test program ready GPA – No minimum required On-track for high school graduation Interview with HS Coordinator Complete admissions paperwork USG Test Scores* - Minimum combined SAT CR/Math of 970 or ACT composite of 20 GPA* - Minimum 3.0 high school GPA On-track for high school graduation and completion of the USG RHSC requirements. Exemption of all LS requirements. Complete admissions paperwork *The Board of Regents sets minimum admission requirements and institutions may have higher requirements.

  25. MOWR Enrollment Process • High school informs all rising juniors and seniors of College Credit Now opportunities no later than April 1. • Interested students consults with HS Counselor to determine eligibility. • Eligible student and parent meet with HS Counselor to complete MOWR paperwork. • MOWR Participation Permission form is sent to the postsecondary institution. • Student completes admission process at postsecondary institution. • Student is notified by the postsecondary institution of acceptance.

  26. Participation Permission Form

  27. Resource Forms and Documents • MOWR 2012 Guidelines • MOWR Participation Checklist • Participation Permission Form must be signed by parent and student to confirm they received information • State Educational Agency Links • Eligible College Form

  28. Eligible MOWR Colleges/Universities • Any University System of Georgia college/university • Any Technical College System of Georgia college • Some private nonprofit and private for-profit colleges that meet specific requirements • Agreement and college information to be completed by eligible private colleges.

  29. Available Courses Accel http://www.gsfc.org/main/publishing/pdf/2005/accel_courses.pdf Dual Enrollment Course Directory http://doe.k12.ga.us/ci_cta.aspx?PageReq=CICTASeam MOWR Supplemental Course List http://www.usg.edu/student_affairs/high_school/admissions_enrollment/

  30. Move On When Ready First Year Data • A MOWR student cannot take additional classes at the high school while participating. They are full-time at college. • First year’s results for 2010-11: • 460 total students • 126 attended TCSG college—11 different institutions • 326 attended USG college or university—20 different institutions • 8 attended private colleges—4 different institutions • Payments to colleges and universities of $600,000

  31. WHAT IS PAID? • Provided through FTE, as arranged by the GADOE • Possible FTE (TCSG & USG) • College Access Challenge Grant (TCSG) • Students (USG) • Students & Parents Tuition, Fees, & Materials Books Food/Transportation

  32. New MOWR Payment Process • The student information will be gathered electronically from the colleges for their MOWR students. • Colleges will be paid electronically from GaDOE instead of actual paper check as they were this past year. • Payments will be made twice a year, once per semester. We have to have Vendor Infor. to pay. • After the FTE counts in October and March, the students are verified for payment by cross referencing with the college student information.

  33. Payment Process Issues To Avoid • MOWR students were not coded as MOWR students • Students coded as MOWR but were not MOWR students • Accel students coded as MOWR • MOWR students coded as Accel

  34. USG – Student Affairs Web Page http://www.usg.edu/student_affairs/

  35. TCSG – High School Initiatives Web Page http://www.dtae.org/teched/highschoolinit.html

  36. MOWR Testimonials Evan Graham graduated from high school with 29 semester hours of college credit. She plans to attend Spelman College this fall and hopes to become a Cardiologist. Mashfil Ahmed graduated from Shiloh High School. He plans to continue this fall at Georgia Tech and has a number of hours of college credit to apply to his degree program. Natalee Dukes graduated with an associate degree as well as her high school diploma. She plans to continue on this fall as a pre-med student.

  37. MOWR Testimonials • From the beginning, we have felt very well informed on the program and given help with every concern or issue that needed clarifying-----Parent of MOWR student • This program has provided my son the opportunity to really get ahead in his college classes---Parent • My daughter was able to be challenged more by going to the college for all her classes and it gave her some flexibility so she could have a job---Parent • This was a good program for some of our students that just didn’t like dealing with the regular high school setting and schedule and were ready to move on to the college challenge---high school counselor • I think this was a great thing this year because it gave us a chance to use it as a recruiting tool to get high school students on our campus now and we hope to continue hear when they graduate from high school----admission director from private college

  38. QUESTIONS

More Related