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College Before College (Part 1): How Dual Enrollment Became Mainstream

11 min · Gisteren
aflevering College Before College (Part 1): How Dual Enrollment Became Mainstream artwork

Beschrijving

Earning college credit in high school was once viewed as a specialized opportunity for a relatively small group of students. Today, acceleration has rapidly become mainstream, reshaping expectations for students, families, schools, and higher education itself. Corey Alderdice, a national voice on talent and transformation, explores how dual enrollment and early college programs moved from the margins into the center of American education, why policymakers and families have embraced acceleration so quickly, and what happens when getting ahead starts to feel less like an opportunity and more like an expectation. Learn more about the current landscape of college-level learning in high school in the National Alliance of Concurrent Enrollment Partnership's report Beyond Rigor: Closing the Quality Gap in State Dual Enrollment Policy [https://www.nacep.org/beyond-rigor-closing-the-quality-gap-in-state-dual-enrollment-policy/]. For additional thoughts from Corey, visit coreyalderdice.com [https://coreyalderdice.com]. You can also follow him on Twitter/X [https://x.com/alderdice], LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/coreyalderdice], BlueSky [https://bsky.app/profile/alderdice.bsky.social], YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/coreyalderdice], Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/alderdice], and Threads [https://www.threads.net/@alderdice].

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Alle afleveringen

149 afleveringen

aflevering College Before College (Part 1): How Dual Enrollment Became Mainstream artwork

College Before College (Part 1): How Dual Enrollment Became Mainstream

Earning college credit in high school was once viewed as a specialized opportunity for a relatively small group of students. Today, acceleration has rapidly become mainstream, reshaping expectations for students, families, schools, and higher education itself. Corey Alderdice, a national voice on talent and transformation, explores how dual enrollment and early college programs moved from the margins into the center of American education, why policymakers and families have embraced acceleration so quickly, and what happens when getting ahead starts to feel less like an opportunity and more like an expectation. Learn more about the current landscape of college-level learning in high school in the National Alliance of Concurrent Enrollment Partnership's report Beyond Rigor: Closing the Quality Gap in State Dual Enrollment Policy [https://www.nacep.org/beyond-rigor-closing-the-quality-gap-in-state-dual-enrollment-policy/]. For additional thoughts from Corey, visit coreyalderdice.com [https://coreyalderdice.com]. You can also follow him on Twitter/X [https://x.com/alderdice], LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/coreyalderdice], BlueSky [https://bsky.app/profile/alderdice.bsky.social], YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/coreyalderdice], Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/alderdice], and Threads [https://www.threads.net/@alderdice].

Gisteren11 min
aflevering This Wasn't Your Best Work artwork

This Wasn't Your Best Work

A single sentence can challenge us, motivate us, or make us feel small. The difference often comes down to trust. Corey Alderdice, a national voice on talent and transformation, explores the delicate balance between candor and care in education, reflecting on how teachers can hold students to high expectations without turning challenge into shame. For additional thoughts from Corey, visit coreyalderdice.com [https://coreyalderdice.com]. You can also follow him on Twitter/X [https://x.com/alderdice], LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/coreyalderdice], BlueSky [https://bsky.app/profile/alderdice.bsky.social], YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/coreyalderdice], Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/alderdice], and Threads [https://www.threads.net/@alderdice].

3 jun 202610 min
aflevering Why Demonstrated Interest Matters More Than Ever in Selective College Admissions artwork

Why Demonstrated Interest Matters More Than Ever in Selective College Admissions

As selective college admissions continues to shift, strong students and families need to understand not only how to build a strong application—but how colleges interpret genuine interest. In this jumbo-sized episode, Corey Alderdice explores why “demonstrated interest” may play a greater role in the upcoming admissions cycle, especially as some selective universities move away from traditional supplemental essays and as application numbers continue to rise. Building on the previous episode’s look at recent changes in selective admissions, this conversation goes deeper into the practical realities behind the process: how colleges think about yield, why some institutions want stronger signals that admitted students are likely to enroll, and how families can approach the process thoughtfully without turning it into a game. With summer underway, now is the perfect time for students and families to begin diving into the many moving pieces of college admissions. From building a balanced college list to researching which schools track demonstrated interest, attending official admissions events, using early application plans wisely, and preparing for possible deferrals or waitlists, this episode offers practical guidance for making interest visible in ways that are authentic, appropriate, and student-led. The goal is not to manufacture enthusiasm or chase every admissions tactic. It is to begin with fit, understand the technical landscape, and help students communicate clearly when a college is more than just another name on the list. For additional thoughts from Corey, visit coreyalderdice.com [https://coreyalderdice.com]. You can also follow him on Twitter/X [https://x.com/alderdice], LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/coreyalderdice], BlueSky [https://bsky.app/profile/alderdice.bsky.social], YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/coreyalderdice], Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/alderdice], and Threads [https://www.threads.net/@alderdice].

30 mei 202621 min
aflevering Tulane Killed the ‘Why Us?’ Essay. That Matters More Than You Think. artwork

Tulane Killed the ‘Why Us?’ Essay. That Matters More Than You Think.

Why did Tulane drop its “Why Tulane?” essay—and what does that tell us about where college admissions is heading? The change may seem small, but it points to a larger shift from what students say about fit to what their application behavior reveals. Corey Alderdice, a national voice on talent and transformation, explores how colleges are increasingly reading demonstrated interest through behavioral signals like Early Action, Early Decision, campus engagement, timing, and enrollment predictability. Using Tulane as a case study, this episode considers why the old “love letter” essay may matter less in an era of application inflation, AI-assisted writing, and sophisticated yield management. For additional thoughts from Corey, visit coreyalderdice.com [https://coreyalderdice.com]. You can also follow him on Twitter/X [https://x.com/alderdice], LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/coreyalderdice], BlueSky [https://bsky.app/profile/alderdice.bsky.social], YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/coreyalderdice], Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/alderdice], and Threads [https://www.threads.net/@alderdice].

27 mei 20268 min
aflevering Coming Soon: College Before College artwork

Coming Soon: College Before College

Dual enrollment and early college programs have rapidly shifted from specialized opportunities into a defining feature of modern American education. Students are earning college credit earlier than ever before, but the rise of acceleration is also raising deeper questions about quality, purpose, pressure, and what education is ultimately supposed to become. Corey Alderdice, a national voice on talent and transformation, previews this special Summer School series exploring how acceleration became normalized, why achievement is increasingly measured through accumulation, and how the growing overlap between high school and college may fundamentally reshape the future purpose of higher education itself. Learn more about the current landscape of college-level learning in high school in the National Alliance of Concurrent Enrollment Partnership's report Beyond Rigor: Closing the Quality Gap in State Dual Enrollment Policy [https://www.nacep.org/beyond-rigor-closing-the-quality-gap-in-state-dual-enrollment-policy/]. For additional thoughts from Corey, visit coreyalderdice.com [https://coreyalderdice.com]. You can also follow him on Twitter/X [https://x.com/alderdice], LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/coreyalderdice], BlueSky [https://bsky.app/profile/alderdice.bsky.social], YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/coreyalderdice], Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/alderdice], and Threads [https://www.threads.net/@alderdice].

23 mei 20263 min