Community
College
Enrollment
LVCA encourages capable high school
students to enroll in community college courses when it is deemed appropriate
by the parent and the Educational Specialist. In addition,
The parent is responsible for enrolling the
student by contacting the college enrollment office. The parent must identify
their student as being currently enrolled in a public high school. Each
community college is able to set its own standards for admittance, such as a
minimum age, demonstrated ability, or professor approval. Colleges may require
placement testing and/or orientation sessions. They may also require the ES to
sign letters of recommendation, and require official transcripts before
admitting the high school student. It is important for parents to start this
process early to meet application and enrollment deadlines. ESs should become
familiar with their local community college’s procedures and restrictions to
better advise parents.
Attendance Credit
The ES must know the number of college units
an
-If an
-If a student is taking community college
classes, and is not attempting to earn a minimum of 20 units (not counting any
college credits) in the charter school, then only half attendance credit can be
claimed.
-If a student is taking community college
classes, and is not attempting to earn a minimum of 10 units (not counting
any college credits) in LVCA, then the ES should contact their advisor immediately.
For those instances above when the ES must
claim half attendance credit, the ES must ensure half attendance credit is
marked on the attendance roll sheet. The parent will alternate X’s and O’s on
the roll sheet.
Writing the Learning Record
It is not mandatory that classes taken by
the student at the community college be documented on the learning record if
they are taking at least 20 units not counting their college classes. The
parent should be advised to consult with the university admissions office where
the student intends to enroll after graduation to determine whether to place
the college classes on the high school transcript. Some universities may not
accept for transfer any community college units that have also been used for
high school graduation credit. The ES still must know how many units the
student is earning at college since the
Writing learning records for a student
attending college classes is not any different than any other learning record
and follows the same general guidelines for writing any other high school
learning record:
Examples
Computer Programming 1B: Julio listened to lectures, took notes,
and completed lab assignments on the following topics: I/O Streams as an
Introduction to Objects and Classes- streams and basic file I/O, tools for
stream I/O, character I/O, inheritance among stream classes; Defining Classes
and Abstract Data Types- structures, classes, abstract data types, classes to
produce ADTs, alternative implementation of a class.
He was pleased to get 86% on his midterm.
Art 1B: Madeline listened to lectures, read her text, viewed other
students' samples, and created her own samples modeling the style of the
following artists: Tiffany, Rouault, Kollwitz and Barlach. She made a
mosaic tree out of tiles, created a stained 'glass' flower out of tissue paper,
drew a sketch of a face using boxes for dimensions, and made an action scene
with balloon people.
Physics: Brian listened to lectures, took notes, read the text,
answered written comprehension and vocabulary questions, performed labs, and
took chapter tests on the following topics: Sound- the nature of sound waves,
loudness, pitch, speed of sound, boundary effects; Music- consonance,
overtones, musical instruments. Labs conducted were on 'the property of waves'
and 'vibrating strings'.
Assigning Credits
LVCA allows students to receive credit for a high
school course and to keep the college units. The college evaluates and assigns
the college units. The ES documents and evaluates the learning that takes
place in the college course and then assigns appropriate high school credit
under a similar high school class name. The name of the high school class
may or may not be the same name as the college class. The number of high school
units earned depends on the content of the class and what learning took place.
There is no specific formula. The ES must use their professional judgment
as for any high school course and consult
their ES advisor for help. (Be sure to include the name of the college and
the name of the course/course number taken).
Examples of classes:
If you are unsure what the course entails,
get a copy of the course syllabus to help judge the content as you evaluate the
student's work. The ES Advisor can also help the ES through the process of
evaluating the high school unit value of a college course. Students may not
receive more than 10 units per course name, 5 units for the "A"
semester and 5 units for semester "B".
Summer School courses taken at a community college can be put on the student’s
High School Transcript. The student should request that an official college
transcript be sent to the LVCA office, and the courses will be added. If added
in this manner, the student and the parent should be advised that this will
show that the course was used to meet high school graduation requirements,
and may not count in the credits a student accrues at the college level towards
college graduation requirements. Parents should be advised to consult with
the university admissions office where the student intends to enroll after
graduation to determine whether to place the college classed on the high school
transcript.
Students that have their courses added in the above manner for summer school,
do NOT have the information recorded in their learning record nor does the
ES
add
a course
title and credits to the student’s report card.
College Tuition
LVCA cannot pay for community college courses
although many community colleges will waive the tuition for high school students.
Check with the college you are interested in attending for their requirements.
College Books
Ask parents to obtain the book list as soon
after enrolling as possible. Parents should get the complete book name, ISBN,
price, and publisher’s name. Texts ordered directly from the publisher will
usually arrive within 4-6 weeks. Books may also be ordered by the ISBN from
Border Books, although this option may take extra time. Parents may also choose
to spend their personal funds to purchase the books, but no reimbursement
will be given.