Some students have to take a non-credit,
remedial, or basic skills class before enrolling in classes for college credit in the
subject. For each non-credit class the student must take, the credits will have
to be made up in summer school or by taking an extra semester.
A
student placing into non-credit classes is not uncommon and is the result of a
few issues:
1.
The
student has taken a placement exam (often part of the orientation process) and
from the scores earned on the test has been placed in the remedial class. Let’s
face it, sometimes students coast through their senior year of high school and
don’t put forth the effort required to maintain their skills in a specific subject,
especially one they don’t like in the first place. Once June, July, or August
rolls around and they take the placement test as part of college orientation or
enrollment they haven’t even thought about the subject for six to twelve
months. If this is the case, there is virtually no way they can improve their
skills on the subject in time to jump right into a college level class.
Basically, they need a refresher to be successful in a regular college class.
2.
The
student’s grades and SAT or ACT scores are low enough in the subject to warrant
remediation. If your child has always detested reading and writing and has the
grades and standardized tests scores to prove it, he will probably not be able
to succeed in college level composition classes without strengthening his
skills in the subject. You probably already know what subjects your child has
always struggled in so remedial placement is rarely a surprise. Even if your
child earned grades high enough to pass these classes in high school, you can
guarantee that the college level classes will be much more challenging.
3.
It is far
better in the long run that your child enroll in the remedial class, even if it
does not offer credit, because the alternative is to enroll in the higher level
class and struggle all semester just to fail or perform poorly in the class.
Having to pay for and take non-credit classes
is not fun and can be disheartening to a student who feels ready for college,
but it is important for students to accept their academic challenges and work
to overcome them before making the leap into a high stakes college level class.
In addition, most non-credit classes are graded as pass/fail and grades in
these classes are not calculated in the student’s GPA. Whereas, a student who
enrolls in a regular college level class and fails it will have the grade
permanently etched on his transcript.
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