<p>Dual enrollement wouldn’t allow me to graduate college earlier than graduating high school early. If anything, it would be the other way around. Dual enrollement at my school only allows 14 credit hours a semester, and we have some restrictions on how many classes we are allowed to take per year high-school based (DE classes would count). Looking at the general schedule of the engineering classes at the college I would go to, some semesters the students end up taking 19+ credit hours a semester. </p>
<p>As of high school math courses, I will be a sophomore next year taking AP Calc BC, and the only math class left at my high school would be AP Stat, which I would rather take at a college than an AP class. I will definitely be doing DE for math. For science classes, I was planning on doing either Chemistry I+Lab or Physics I+II DE if I graduate a year early. If I don’t, I’ll do both of them.</p>
<p>Dual enrollement does cost less, and if I don’t get accepted into a preitigious college that we can afford and there are no other benefits of graduating early, I would definitely do DE since it would be at the same school but payed for by the state.</p>
<p>^^Bringing that up made me think of another question. If I went to the DE university after I graduate, I will try to get in the honors college there and have a very good chance of it. The general ed classes are different though, so I’m worried that I’ll have to retake many of the DE classes since they won’t be honors, and a lot of them would go to waste if I didn’t need them for the honors general ed. There is an honors dual enrollement but I really don’t know how tough it is to get accepted. I’m assuming it’s pretty tough, since they only accept 15-25 kids a year for that. Any thoughts?</p>