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Getting A Head Start On College Classes Through Distance Learning

Many students begin to plot and plan their post-secondary education early on in their senior year at high school, if not sooner. They look at schools and programs, and work hard to get their grades up as they plan their next steps in their education. What most students don’t realize, however, is that they can begin to take college level courses while still in high school, sometimes at community colleges and frequently though distance learning.

So long as you have met any pre-requisite requires, you should be able to register with most distance learning providers. You can then take a class or two (but not too many on top of your regular school, lest your grades drop) and complete them in the evenings, or after school, or over the summer break. For students coming from small schools with a limited class selection, this can be especially helpful, but it also allows you to bypass some of the introductory courses at colleges and universities, so that you can pursue other studies.

While you’re waiting for responses from colleges and universities (or even before you apply), you can check out the classes available to you through distance learning, and at your local community college as well. It is vital that you make sure that the schools you are applying for will recognize the distance learning provider as an accredited academic institution, and that any credits you earn are transferrable. It would be a frustrating waste to complete classes only to discover that you’ll have to retake them.

A few benefits of distance learning and community colleges are that both have lower tuition fees than other colleges and universities, and classes at community colleges are smaller, while studying through distance learning, you typically will be studying independently. This gives you a good chance to hone your time management and independent study skills as well. In addition, you will get a chance to experience the expectations and demands of post-secondary education in a smaller dose than taking a full course load. And finally, if you take classes you’d need to take at college anyways, you can lighten your course load once you graduate and are your school of choice, as you will already have completed some of the entry level courses.

By: Jon Ginsburg

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