Personal Finance

From dual enrollment to course sharing, these 4 moves can help you save big on college costs

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These days, students and their families have to be proactive about cutting college costs.

“It used to be, get into the best school you can get into and then figure out how to pay for it,” said Kalman Chany, a financial aid consultant and author of The Princeton Review’s “Paying for College.”

Now, Chany says, “that’s a recipe for disaster.”

As inflation heats up, tuition alone at many colleges and universities is prohibitively high. About 83% of high school students said the current economic conditions have affected their ability to pay for college, according to a recent survey by scholarship search site ScholarshipOwl.

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Further, 88% plan to work part- or full-time to afford school. But there are other ways to rein in costs.

Even if you don’t have a well-funded 529 college savings plan, a few tried-and-true money-saving techniques can help.

Here are some of the best — and often underrated — options for high schoolers.

1. Take college courses in high school

Dual enrollment is a state-run program that allows students to take college-level classes, often through a local community college, while they are still in high school.

As many as 3 in 10 community college students are in dual enrollment programs, according to the American Association of Community Colleges.

Unlike Advanced Placement, the program in which high school students take courses and exams that could earn them college credit, dual enrollment credits are more likely to transfer.

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In some cases, students may even be able to complete an associate’s degree by the time they finish high school, a process known as “early college.”

Over four years, early college programs cost about $3,800 more per student than traditional high school, according to one study. However, the estimated return on that investment is about $33,709 in increased lifetime earnings.

Before committing, research your state’s program to check the requirements and see how the credits will apply toward a degree.

2. Pile on Advanced Placement credits

But check the guidelines on Advanced Placement first. Each college has its own policies for awarding credit — although just completing the coursework may give you a leg up.

“APs work more to show that you excelled in high school,” said Hafeez Lakhani, founder and president of New York-based Lakhani Coaching, which helps during the college application process.

“It’s one of the most trusted ways to show you are challenging yourself with an advanced curriculum.”

3. Transfer from community college

A two-year program is not necessarily an alternative to a four-year degree. Increasingly, students go from community college to a four-year school.

“It’s a very smart way to start your higher education,” said Martha Parham, senior vice president of public relations at the American Association of Community Colleges. “A state university is about three times the cost for the same first two years.”

A state university is about three times the cost for the same first two years.

Martha Parham 

senior vice president of public relations at the American Association of Community Colleges

At two-year public schools, tuition and fees are $3,860 for the 2022–2023 academic year, according to the College Board. Alternatively, at in-state four-year public schools, tuition is $10,940 and at four-year private universities it averages $39,400.

Today, about half of all community college students go on to earn a bachelor’s degree, according to data from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center.

At least 35 states even have policies that guarantee that students with an associate’s degree can then transfer to a four-year state school as a junior.

4. Try course sharing

If you are already enrolled in a four-year school, tapping community college courses can still be a worthwhile way to cut costs, a strategy known as course sharing.

In this case, students may be able to take a class at their local community college over the summer or at night and have it count toward their coursework.

In the wake of the pandemic, the online offerings have improved dramatically, making it even easier for students to work in classes from other institutions that are either less expensive or more accessible, keeping them on budget and on track for graduation.

“Sometimes those same courses are going to be cheaper at a community college,” Chany said. However, there is still the risk that those credits won’t count.

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