New York college students may have to go to summer school

By Darren Johnson
Campus News

If you are a community college student and transferring to either a SUNY/CUNY four-year college and accepting the “free tuition” Excelsior Scholarship or a private college that is accepting the TAP Enhanced Tuition Award, you may want to check your credits. This also may apply if you are already in a SUNY/CUNY college and are merely registering for fall and want the added aid. You may need to go to summer school — and you need to act quickly — the first summer sessions start this month and next.

For example, if you are transferring in as a sophomore, you will need to have had successfully completed 30 credits or more (usually with a C- or better, depending on the college accepting your credits). If you are transferring in as a junior, you will need to have completed 60 credits. Not reaching those benchmarks, even if your parents earn less than the maximum $110,000 a year, means you may not qualify for the scholarship.

So, what to do? Hurry, you still can take a summer course at a community college. Summer Session I is starting soon; Session II starts July 2 or July 9 and runs to mid-August at a bunch of colleges. Some colleges run a Session III in August. Check Google by typing in “[Name of College]” and “courses.”

Community colleges like Rockland, Herkimer, Schenectady, Suffolk, Ulster, Mohawk Valley, Westchester, Dutchess, Nassau, LaGuardia, Queensborough, Orange and Hudson Valley have relatively affordable online courses (about $160-200 per credit, give or take) that can be taken easily from anywhere in the state.

Usually, you’re safe taking common courses like Introduction to Sociology or Psychology 101 — just be sure to email your transfer admissions counselor at the four-year school to get affirmation that the course will indeed transfer.

Now, it takes money to make money. A three-credit summer course could cost you $500 at the lowest priced community colleges. But the Excelsior awards may be up to $6000 or more, so the gamble is worth it if your parents earn less than six figures.

The course offerings at the various community colleges seem interesting. You could be anywhere in the state, for example, and take an online course in Child Growth and Development, Wellness or Ethics at Herkimer or Juvenile Delinquency or Elementary French II at Schenectady — completely online.

There are 36 SUNY and CUNY community colleges in the state, and someone from Buffalo pays the same in-state rate as someone from Queens or Montauk.

It’s easy to transfer credits you take at a SUNY or CUNY online and pay in-state tuition. File a “certificate of residency” from any county or borough in the State of New York, and you’re good to go.

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