Early Degree

Early Degree is an option for ambitious high school students to complete the requirements for an Associate’s Degree while in high school. Early Degree students combine Concurrent Enrollment courses with CollegeNow Online courses, and occasionally on-campus and Advanced Placement courses, to fulfill an Associate’s Degree’s 60+ credits. Most courses are concurrent enrollment courses taken at the high school, allowing students to simultaneously earn high school and college credit for the same course. Requirements unavailable at the high school are taken online or on campus.

The Early Degree Student

Early Degree is an academically rigorous option that appeals to mature, highly-motivated students. The average Early Degree student graduates with honors from ¿ì²¥ÊÓƵ Cortland with an average GPA of 3.54. Those who pursue the Early Degree should be certain of their college major and career goals, skilled at time management, ready to enter college at junior-level coursework, and willing to dedicate the required time, energy, and money to earning the required credits.

Most Early Degree graduates are pursuing careers that require double majors or graduate degrees. Past Early Degree students have reported enjoying advanced standing and priority registration in their baccalaureate programs, maintaining NCAA eligibility into their graduate programs, and adding international learning and internship experiences while staying on track for their degree.

Available Degrees

The majority of Early Degree students earn the . Some students earn the . These degrees allow students to use the wide variety of SUNY General Education courses available at their high schools to fulfill degree requirements.

Eligibility

Early Degree is within reach for students on track to earn at least 40-45 college credits (including any AP credits) at their high school. Though each student’s path to degree may be different, all must be on track to take the following courses at their high school:

  • College English (ENGL101 and ENGL102) during their senior year. Typically, a high school uses a student’s overall English performance, English 11 course grade, and English 11 Regents score to determine eligibility for college English.
  • At least one or two SUNY Gen. Ed. approved college-credit Math courses. (BUAD104 and MATH100 do not count).
  • At least one or two SUNY Gen. Ed. Lab Science courses. (BIOL114 and ASTR101 do not count.)
  • **Math/Science students also need Calculus I (MATH201) and two SUNY Gen. Ed. Lab Science sequences (BIOL101/102, CHEM101/102, BIOL104/105, CHEM107/108, PHSC104/105, or their AP equivalent) OR one Lab Science sequence plus MATH200 and MATH202.

Academic Requirements

  • Minimum required GPA on ¿ì²¥ÊÓƵ Cortland transcript at end of junior year: 3.0.
  • Minimum required High School average at end of junior year: 85.
  • Meet with high school guidance counselor and CollegeNow advisor by May 1st of junior year to solidify Early Degree plans.

Things to Consider

Taking additional online or on-campus courses requires an investment of time, energy, and money. Students should consider time they spend on extracurricular activities, homework, and athletics, then ask themselves if they can dedicate time to additional college courses during junior and senior year.

Students should understand that earning an Associate’s Degree in Liberal Arts does not guarantee that a student will begin college as a junior.

Getting Started

A few college-credit courses may be available to students in their freshman or sophomore year. However, most courses are for juniors and seniors. CollegeNow Online courses are also for qualified juniors and seniors. (With their guidance counselor’s recommendation, students may begin online courses the summer after sophomore year.)

Ninth and tenth graders eager to start planning for Early Degree should ask their guidance counselor about which concurrent enrollment courses they are on track to take. A student’s main focus as a freshman and sophomore should be to earn excellent grades and build the knowledge and skills necessary to succeed in college-level coursework.

Students interested in earning an Associate’s Degree while in high school should talk to their guidance counselor, who will contact the CollegeNow Office to discuss the student’s eligibility and draft an individualized plan for his or her college and career goals.