Dual Credit and COVID-19: How to Help Your Students Thrive in An Online Environment
Navigating dual credit college courses as a high school student can be full of challenges. Still, with most colleges and universities switching to online classes under the current COVID-19 pandemic, it can be seen as a nearly insurmountable challenge. Actually, online courses present a challenge for most students because it requires discipline, organization, and resourcefulness, all of which must be cultivated over time. The new reality for many dual credit students today is that there is no time to fully develop the necessary skills before diving into a semester of online courses exclusively.
You can help your dual credit student tremendously by supporting them to implement these three simple steps designed to help high school students survive and thrive in an all-online dual credit course environment.
1. Establish and stick to routines
Online students need structure, and a study calendar is a great way to create it together. Paper or digital, the type of calendar doesn’t matter as long as students track their daily and weekly schedules. To get started, help your high school schooler establish a daily routine for getting the day started. Maybe he likes to start the day with exercise, meditation, or journaling. Regardless of how he begins the day, make sure he develops a simple routine and sticks with it. Once he has added a daily routine to his calendar, have him check his syllabus for assignments and assessments to add to his schedule, committing to the due dates. Don’t forget to have him include time to study, practice, and review course material.
2. Communicate often and early
One drawback of online classes is the convenience and flexibility that the courses provide as students access course materials at any time. However, that flexibility can be dangerous because students could be tempted to only check-in when the course materials are due. In many ways, freedom can lead to bad habits of procrastination and making excuses. Don’t let flexibility become a barrier for your student; instead, have them create the structure they need by scheduling a regular check-in time with their instructor over assignments, assessments, and course performance. If he struggles or falls behind, encourage him not to stay silent. Encourage him to reach out immediately to his high school counselor and college instructor to share his specific challenges and to seek assistance. There is nothing worse than seeing a student struggle, not knowing that the instructor is willing and able to provide support and guidance to eliminate their problems.
3. Look Back and Ahead
Knowing what is due weeks from now, not just the next day, can help students maximize their time. Guide your student to make a habit of doing a daily and weekly review where he looks ahead to identify upcoming assignments and deadlines for important tasks. However, he shouldn’t forget to examine a couple of days back to make sure he doesn’t miss anything that needs urgent attention. The more he reviews his schedule, the less likely he will miss an assignment or task, and the more likely he will be able to keep up with a realistic workload.
Don’t let the autonomy and flexibility presented by online dual credit courses be an excuse for your student to crash and burn this semester. Take advantage of the opportunities offered this semester to help your high school student develop the discipline, organization, and resourcefulness needed to thrive in any dual credit course. For a bright future in an all-online dual credit environment, help your student implement the practical strategies of establishing and sticking to routines, communicating often and early, and always looking back and ahead.
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Considering Family to Prepare Students for their Future
It seemed like yesterday when educators were introduced to the concept of "21st Century Skills" during professional development sessions and conferences. The message was clear, teachers need to teach differently to prepare students for the industries of the future. Now, it is not uncommon for educators to see the need to prepare students to contribute and shape the society they will inherit. But, starting with the early 2000s, teachers were fed a heavy diet of the frequently updated futuristic 'Did You Know' videos.
Remember when “21st Century Skills” was the buzzword plastered across every professional development session? Teachers were told we had to prepare kids for jobs that didn’t even exist yet, for industries so futuristic they might as well have been ripped from a sci-fi novel. The message was clear: teach differently or risk leaving students unprepared for the brave new world ahead.
And we bought in. Many of us were mesmerized by those “Did You Know” videos—glossy, fast-cut reels showing how technology would reshape life as we knew it. We imagined our students stepping into careers filled with wonder, solving humanity’s greatest challenges with cutting-edge innovations.
But here we are, a decade later, watching universities launch degree programs in—wait for it—the cannabis industry. Northern Michigan University now offers cannabis studies. Cannabis! Is this what all that futuristic hype was for? Is this the grand payoff of years spent reinventing classrooms, revamping standards, and retraining teachers?
Let’s be honest. This isn’t just about marijuana. This is about whether education has lost sight of its true North Star: the family. Have we become so enamored with “innovation” that we’ve stopped asking the most basic question: Will this strengthen families—or weaken them?
Because families, not industries, are the bedrock of society. Strong families create strong communities. And when families crumble? Communities crumble. Nations crumble. That’s not ideology—it’s reality.
Just look around. Addiction isn’t just a crisis; it’s practically a cultural identity. We toss around words like smartphone addiction, porn addiction, food addiction, opioid addiction. Some days it feels like Americans are addicted to being addicted. Even our politics runs on addiction—to outrage, to emotion, to attacking anyone who dares to disagree.
Where does self-control—the antidote to addiction—come from? Families. Where do children first learn resilience, restraint, responsibility? Families. Yet our education system, in its blind pursuit of “the next big thing,” often undermines the very institution that teaches those foundational skills.
So yes, whether or not you support cannabis legalization is beside the point. The real question is: when universities embrace controversial industries, do they consider the ripple effects on the family? Do K-12 schools stop to ask how their policies, practices, and trendy new programs affect the home lives of the students they claim to serve? Or are families just an afterthought in the race to be relevant?
Education should be more than a conveyor belt to industry. It should be a partnership with families to raise healthy, grounded citizens who can think clearly, choose wisely, and lead responsibly. Otherwise, we’re just fueling cycles of indulgence and addiction while patting ourselves on the back for being “innovative.”
So, let’s ask the question few seem brave enough to ask: what will the next decade’s “Did You Know” videos glorify? More industries that exploit our weaknesses? Or educational choices that finally honor and strengthen the institution most critical to our collective future—the family?