<p>My senior daughter is trying to get admitted to several California State University campuses. She took a geometry course last summer that was NCAA approved. Now I am looking on the a-g list and do not see this particular course. It’s Virtual High School. She has emailed several coaches with her video and is getting emails that they want to come to watch her practice and see her during her club season. Her high school does not recognize online courses and won’t add to her transcript.
Does anyone have experience with this???</p>
<p>Hi VBmom22, is the name of the school California Virtual Academy? If so, it appears to be UC/Cal State approved; their courses (including Geometry) appear on the a-g list that is on the doorways website. </p>
<p>As far as the transcripts are concerned, I know that our high school will not add outside courses to the transcript unless it is a class our school does not offer. My daughter wanted to get Spanish 3 out of the way and took it through another high school on line over the summer. This class does not appear on her primary HS transcript; when she applies to college we will request that the other school send her transcript directly. It works the same way as someone who attended multiple high schools; each school sends its own transcript, and the colleges do their own GPA calculations. Hope this helps!</p>
<p>Hi VolleyBallMom! </p>
<p>We concur with K2Mom, universities in addition to corporate job applications expect transcripts from a mishmash of schools. It is the norm nowadays in light of an entire spectrum of education innovation, including online education K-12 through PhD. </p>
<p>If you have any other questions like this feel free to ask us at: [Trends</a> in Online Degrees](<a href=“http://www.degreetrend.com%5DTrends”>http://www.degreetrend.com)</p>
<p>Keep up the good work Moms!</p>
<p>Best,
DegreeTrend</p>
<p>check the school district and NCAA in regards to those classes,several fencers in my daughters school had admissions/eligibility issues because of their on-line classes versus those who attended classes and did less international competition.</p>