MONROE, La. — When most high school seniors were celebrating graduation from their respective schools, Grejika Abram had two ceremonies.
Abram took advantage of the dual enrollment program offered by Neville High School and Louisiana Delta Community College to fulfill her freshman level classes before setting foot on the campus of Mississippi’s Tougaloo College.
In May she graduated from Neville High on a Thursday and two days later received a general studies certificate from Delta Community College. The paper certifies successful completion of 43 hours of dual enrollment credit, which will transfer to her university of choice.
Abram is part of a growing number of high school students taking advantage of the opportunity to receive credit in their high school level courses and college level courses by taking college classes on the campus of their high school.
She took introductory courses in calculus, biology, English, Latin, toxicology, geology, psychology, public speaking, theater appreciation and business, among others. The only classes she took away from Neville were calculus, which she took at Grambling, and English 102, which she took at Delta Community College.
Abram said she enjoyed the opportunity to experience college level coursework from the security of her high school.
“They were taught as if we were stepping onto a college campus,” she said. “The classes were more laid back, more group oriented and more liberal.”