Dual Enrollment Essay

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I am a firm believer that as a secondary educator, my job is to teach my students skills and knowledge they will use after high school. I feel that too many students feel they need to take dual-enrollment or college courses while in high school to prepare for college, accelerate the tuition periods, and avoid debt. My position statement revolves around students missing meaningful high school experiences by being influenced to enroll in these college courses. High school students participating in dual-enrollment or taking college courses became popular in the 1980s, and the trend has increased its demand each school year (Carey, 2015). In the article, “Who’s Participating in Dual-Enrollment?” the statistics were reported “that in 2003, approximately …show more content…

As a music educator in a small, rural school, I have taught many students that admitted they found a passion for, or excelled at my music classes because they decided to “try something new.” Each student and participant is important and valuable in small school programs to ensure the prolongation and traditions of extra-curricular and co-curricular classes or activities. When students feel strained or overwhelmed in school because their schedules are overflowing with unneeded college or dual-enrollment courses, the extra-curricular and co-curricular courses become the first options available to expunge. Data collected and presented in the article “Dual-Enrollment Programs: The Pros and Cons,” exhibit other concerns with dual-enrollment or college courses taken by high school students. Reasons like students enrolling in college courses merely to enhance their transcript resumé, students not mature enough to handle the increased workload and refined study habits of college-age students, and courses that will not even be accepted by the students’ future college or university

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