As a 7th through 12th-grade student, enrolling in college courses is not an easy decision. Discuss the opportunity with your parents/guardians and school counselor so that you understand your responsibilities as a college student. Consider the following before making your final decision.
High School Transcript/Graduation Requirements
- Earn college credits while fulfilling high school graduation requirements, earning high school and college credit at the same time.
- The college grade is factored into your high school GPA and carries the same weight as AP, IB, or honors courses.
- Middle school students begin their high school transcripts with any college courses completed. The grade earned is factored into the high school, not the middle school GPA.
- End-of-course exams for high school English II, Algebra, and Geometry are still required, even if you take the equivalent college course.
- High school graduation could be affected if you do not pass a college course.
Middle/High School Schedule vs. College Schedule
- Taking college classes can provide more options than traditional high school courses.
- You can take classes during the summer, evenings, or weekends, allowing flexibility for other social and sports activities.
- College course availability varies. There is no guarantee of enrollment in college courses during times that work well for your school activity schedule.
- Start/end dates, holidays, and snow days can be different. You will need to keep track of two calendars.
- Check the summer course schedule carefully. There are various start and end dates.
College Transcript/Graduation Requirements
- Accelerate your college career with a quality education close to home. Earn up to 30 credits a year (including summer), 120 credits max.
- Enroll in classes on campus, online, and at the high school (if available).
- Transportation to/from campus is your responsibility.
- Transfer your credits to the University System of Ohio schools – visit https://transfercredit.ohio.gov to learn more.
- Are you planning to attend a private or out-of-state college? You should check with those schools to see how credits could transfer.
- You are starting a college transcript that will follow you through graduate school.
- If you attend YSU after high school, you may be eligible for financial aid based on the credit hours earned and your high school and college GPA.
- The GPA you earn in CCP is always your GPA at YSU, whether as a freshman or a transfer student.
- Participation may lower the overall cost of your college education and shorten the time needed to complete your college degree.
My Cost
- Tuition, books, and academic fees are at no cost to the student under Option B, up to 30 credits (high school and college) max per year.
- If you are a private or homeschooled student and do not receive enough funding from the state, you will be responsible for costs associated with any classes not fully funded by the state.
- Payment options are not split on courses. If a student does not have enough funding to cover the entire cost of a course, the entire course is self-pay. Note: homeschooled students are responsible for their textbooks regardless if funding is awarded.
- You are responsible for school supplies, parking permits, campus recreation fees, library fines, parking fines, etc.
- Your school district, or the state, can seek reimbursement from you if you do not successfully complete a course or withdraw late.
Academic Resources
- You have access to the following academic resources:
- A YSU Academic Advisor
- CCP New Student Orientation and Continuing Student Update Sessions
- CCP Website
- Resch Academic Success Center
- Maag Library
- Mathematics Achievement Center
- Writing Center
your responsibility as a college student
- As a college student, the expectation is that:
- The subject matter of a course enrolled in under CCP may include mature subject matter or materials, including those of a graphic, violent, or sexual nature, that will not be modified based upon participating in CCP or where the class is taught, including at the high school.
- If accepted, you are assigned a YSU email account. We will send program updates, due dates, and other important information to this account. It is your responsibility to check it.
- You will come to class on time, pay attention, and participate in class discussions.
- You will follow all YSU policies, including student conduct and class attendance on campus. For more information, read The Code of Conduct.
- If you are under the age of 14, a parent/guardian must accompany you on campus.
- Your academic record is confidential and protected, even if you are a minor. YSU faculty and staff cannot talk with your parent/guardian without a FERPA Release Form on file.