Detroit Schools Expand Dual Enrollment Program to Cover All High Schools
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 03/11/19
Detroit Public Schools Community  District has expanded its agreement with Wayne County Community College District,  allowing high school students to take dual enrollment courses by attending  community college classes. The idea is to create career pathways for students  as early as ninth grade and earn up to eight college credits per year at no  cost. Up until now, nine of the district's high schools offered dual  enrollment, in arrangements they'd struck themselves. Now, by 2020, all 22 high  schools will do so, and the agreement will be streamlined across the districts.
According to reporting by Chalkbeat and the Michigan  Chronicle, each high school will limit its dual enrollment to one or  several of 26 specific pathways. Currently, those encompass: business and  entrepreneurship, healthcare, technology, media and arts, law, education, public  safety, engineering, manufacturing, transportation, construction and  hospitality.
Some of the pathways will lead to certification or other  industry licensing for the students; others will reduce the number of credits  needed for students to earn an associate's degree or a bachelor's degree.
The next step will be for the schools to engage with local  businesses to develop internships, job shadowing and employment opportunities  that align with the pathways.
The school district recently launched "College  Jumpstart," a set of general education, post-secondary classes offered at  the community colleges, which are "fully transferable" to 30 Michigan  colleges. Students can take these courses as early as their freshman year in  high school.
In a quote in the Michigan Chronicle coverage, college  district Chancellor Curtis Ivery said these types of initiatives set the public  schools apart from other education options. "I think this type of  initiative distinguishes us from charter schools and even private schools. Very  few high schools in the area offer college dual enrollment and the career  academies, which should help give the district a boost."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.