The School of Hard Knocks.
2006-08-14 17:16:45
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answer #1
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answered by Schona 6
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Yes, check with your local community colleges. Some of them assume some students will not be high school graduates.
You might check continuing education programs at universities.
You can also do concurrent enrollment at some colleges. That's when you do college and high school classes at the same time.
2006-08-15 00:11:06
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answer #2
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answered by LorettoBoy 4
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Theoretically, any of them...but you'd probably have to make an appeal to the admission board (Dean of Admissions, etc.) and present a fairly compelling argument as to why you should be accepted as a non-traditional student. I've heard of several older individuals going back to school and being credited for "life experience". And I remember at least one case where a "genius" kid was granted permission to take the SATs and admitted on his perfect 1600 score alone. Of course they don't just admit people based on scores...each case has to be independently evaluated. Basically you have to convince them that it would benefit the school and the prospective student.
2006-08-15 00:17:55
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answer #3
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answered by ordinaryenigma 2
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I think all colleges require either a high school diploma or a GED.
2006-08-15 00:11:21
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answer #4
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answered by sara_busa 4
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All the community colleges in California will enroll anyone at all.
2006-08-15 00:17:07
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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the college in accepted
2006-08-15 00:38:11
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answer #6
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answered by Zman 2
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JC colleges.
2006-08-15 00:11:34
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answer #7
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answered by droolie_da_dog 4
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maybe a technical college?
2006-08-15 00:11:18
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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none that i know of
2006-08-15 00:10:55
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answer #9
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answered by wilderone74 4
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