The Early College/Dual-Enrollment program provides great courses for which high school students can earn college credits at a significant discount; credits that can be used toward a Geneva undergraduate degree or transferred to other accredited schools.
New for Fall 2020 - Geneva has scheduled completely online courses-see the list of courses and their instructors below.
For more details contact us at crossroads@geneva.edu. You can get started by applying for admission.
Biblical Introduction II (BIB 112) | ||
Introduction to the history of salvation as expressed in the Old Testament, including historical and theological study focused on Israel as the covenant people of God, with special attention on the relationship of the Old Testament to Jesus Christ. |
Jonathan Watt, PhD PhD, MA Linguistics, University of Pittsburgh |
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Introductory Applied Chemistry (CHM 100) | ||
An introduction to the basic concepts of chemistry with emphasis on utility for daily life. Not applicable toward a major or minor in chemistry. |
Karen Keppen, MA MAHE, BS Chemistry |
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Principles of Communication (COM 101) | ||
A preliminary inquiry into the fundamental areas of study in the communication discipline including interpersonal, group and public speech. Emphasis placed on the development of sensitivity and competency in the various settings of oral communication. |
Joel Ward, PhD PhD, MA Rhetoric |
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English Composition (ENG 101) | ||
Fundamentals of expository writing. Offers practice in reading, interpreting, and responding to texts. |
Maria Smith, MFA MFA, Creative Writing |
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Introduction to Psychology (PSY 201) | ||
Problems, principles, and methods to serve as a part of a liberal education and as preparation for more advanced work in psychology, or for professional study: development, motivation, emotion, learning, intelligence, personality, and abnormal behavior. |
Diana Rice, PhD PhD, MS Psychology |
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Typically, high school students will take freshman-level courses that are considered general education or core requirements. These are 100- or 200-level courses in the natural sciences, humanities, English, philosophy, math, Spanish, and psychology or other social sciences.
Here is a list of courses that have been offered as dual enrollment courses in the past:
Bibleǂ Also offered online
* Prerequisite requirement. Refer to catalog.