Earning RRISD College Credits
The Round Rock ISD offers multiple paths to earn college credits in high school. Three specific programs provided my two kids with very different paths to 60 credit hours. This blog will outline how the credits were earned, what it meant when going to Texas State, and a couple of tips for any parent trying to follow the same path.
Traditional High School
My daughter went to Cedar Ridge High School and finished at the 25th percentile of her class. Her program included Dual Credit classes at Austin Community College, UT Austin On-Ramps classes, and the traditional AP Classes and Exams. She completed high school with 58 transferable units.
Matriculation at Texas State
She won a Presidential Scholarship due to her SAT scores and started as a freshman - until her transcripts could be evaluated. After the Fall semester she was upgraded from Freshman to Junior. One Semester later she would become a Senior. She is double majoring in Mathematics and Computer Science.
Path number 2 - Early College High School
My son was not interested in Cedar Ridge due to the class size. He did not expect to participate in UIL activities (no band, sports, etc.) so ECHS was a good pick. In May he graduated with his diploma and an Associate of Arts Degree from Austin Community College.
Matriculation at Texas State
Unlike his sister, my son was immediately ranked a Junior. They had both completed ~60 hours of college classwork, but his program was tailored to get the AA degree. He is planning to follow an Engineering track.
Important Tips
- Texas State has very well-defined class requirements for their degree programs. Pre-requisites and co-requisites are clearly identified in their catalog. Both kids will take three (3) years to graduate because of the BA program structures. My daughter's double major added almost 12 units of additional classwork. My son has to take basic computer science classes (not offered at ECHS) and Engineering has a rigorous pre-requisite structure.
- AP Classes and Testing can be a bummer if you work hard in the classroom and fail the test. Dual credit classes, classes at ACC and UT On Ramps offer a more secure risk/reward.
- My daughter enrolled at ACC and completed an Algebra class right after middle school. This gave her confidence on the SAT math exam that propelled her scholarship.
- ECHS has a very small class size. My son's program started with just over one hundred students in his grade with attrition taking the class down to about 60 at graduation. Parents and students self-select into ECHS, so motivation is high, and poor performers tend to leave. This leaves smart motivated students in the program - which is a handicap for scholarships. UT Austin has automatic acceptance for the top 3% of a class - or the top two (2) students from ECHS. Cedar Ridge, with ~675 students in the senior class, would garner ten times the automatic acceptance seats.
The Financial Bottom Line
- Both tracks were very economical - minor costs for books and fees.
- Both delivered about 60 transferrable units from Round Rock ISD to Texas State University.
- We will save on tuition for both kids, but will not avoid room, board, books, and fees - which can still be expensive. (Start your estimates at $1500 per month for an apartment for both kids to include: food, utilities, and the misc. fees.)
- Neither kid will graduate in two years - but they can build a class schedule with more flexibility and 12–15-unit course loads (vs 15-18 units) and graduate in three years.