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Expert Advice

"Being able to balance a busy school schedule and extracurricular activities implies a student is disciplined and can handle responsibility."
Bill Conley, Dean of Undergraduate Admission, Case Western Reserve U.

Special College Programs

College Offerings That May Interest Your Child

Many colleges offer much more than a degree—they also offer special programs that allow students to tailor their education to fit their needs. Here's a sampling of the offerings that might be available to your child:

Accelerated Program: Does your child want to earn a bachelor's degree in three years, rather than four? This is a program students may complete in less time than is normally required, usually by attending summer classes or by carrying extra courses.

Cooperative Education: This program allows students to alternate between semesters of full-time study and related paid full-time work. It takes five years to receive a bachelor's degree under this plan, but your child will get a year's practical experience, too.

Distance Learning: Students take courses for credit broadcasted via public or cable stations or the Internet.

Double Major: Students complete the requirements of two majors, concurrently.

Dual Enrollment: Students enroll in college courses for credit while still in high school.

English as a Second Language (ESL) program: With this program, international students can improve their English skills.

External Degree: Students earn credits towards a college degree through independent study, college courses, proficiency exams, and personal experience. Minimal (or no) classroom attendance is required.

Honors Program: This is an opportunity for educational enrichment, independent study, acceleration, or some combination of these.

Independent Study: Students complete some of their college program by studying independently, instead of attending scheduled classes and completing group assignments.

Internship: This is any short-term supervised work experience, usually related to a student's major, which earns them academic credit.

Semester at Sea: Students live for part of a semester on a ship, frequently a research vessel.

Student-Designed Major: Students construct a major field of study not formally offered by the college. Often nontraditional and interdisciplinary in nature, the major is developed with the approval of a designated college officer or committee.

Study Abroad: Students complete part of the college program studying in another country. A college may operate a campus aboard or it may have a cooperative agreement with some other American college or an institution of the other country.

United Nations Semester: Students take courses at a college in the New York City metropolitan area while participating in an internship program at the United Nations.

Urban Semester: Students spend a semester in a major city, such as Philadelphia, Chicago, New York, Denver, or San Francisco, experiencing the complexities of an urban center through course work, seminars, and/or internships related to their major.

Visiting/Exchange Student: Students study for a semester or more at another college without extending the amount of time required for a degree.

Washington Semester: Students participate in an internship program with a government agency or department in Washington, D.C.

Weekend College: Students take a complete course of study and attend classes only on weekends. These programs are generally restricted to a few areas of study at a college and require more than the traditional number of years to complete.

Your child can find out which colleges offer these programs by using our online College Search.