Program Gives High School Students College Experience for Free | Eastern North Carolina Now

High school students on a college campus are no longer rare. In fact, high school juniors and seniors attending community college may become the new norm.

ENCNow
Press Release:

    WASHINGTON, N.C.     High school students on a college campus are no longer rare. In fact, high school juniors and seniors attending community college may become the new norm. Career and College Promise is a state program that allows high school students to start their college courses at no cost before graduating. Beaufort County Community College will host a Career and College Promise Information Night on February 26 at 6:30 p.m. in Building 12 to explain the popular program to parents and students.

    Dawson Elks, a first-year student at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, took classes at BCCC while enrolled at Washington High School. He said that admissions officers looked favorably on his community college classes.

    "They saw that I was ready to take college courses. It helped me prepare myself for the type of work that college professors require," recounted Elks. He is pursuing pre-med major, eyeing a nursing career.

    "You have more mature people around you," said Elks. "It's less stressful than you would expect." He took a public speaking class, one that he approached with apprehension, but admitted was easier in a smaller class at BCCC.

    He spent his mornings at the college and his afternoons at the high school. Some of his classes were online, while some of them were "seated" or in-person. Elks was a wide receiver for the Pam Pack varsity football team so this was an ideal solution. With CCP, athletes can play high school sports and take college classes. Elks was also part of the Student Government Association at Washington High School and on the varsity track team.

Dawson Elks (left) and Frederick Holscher both took classes at BCCC while playing football and taking classes at Washington High School. Both students are now attending UNC-Chapel Hill: Above.

    During football season, Elks would have online assignments due at midnight on Friday nights- the same night he would have a game.

    "It helps you stay on top of your assignments, so you can't procrastinate too much."

    Elks graduated WHS with 30 college credit hours, a whole year of credit. CCP students start a college transcript, taking their credits and their grades with them to any North Carolina public university. While some students may try to finish college in under four years, Elks plans to take lighter class loads to help him perform better in his classes.

    He sees the growing popularity of the program, as former classmates were in CCP, as well. "The top five students in my graduating class were all CCP," he stated, running through the list.

    High school counselors and BCCC liaisons guide students through eligibility requirements and administer a placement test to demonstrate college readiness. These liaisons will be on hand during the informational session to help answer individual questions after a presentation about the advantages and requirements of the program. Parents will have a chance to hear from students who have participated in the program.

     Contact: Attila Nemecz
           Marketing and Public Relations Coordinator

     Beaufort County Community College

          (252) 940-6387  •  attila.nemecz@beaufortccc.edu
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