Three NMC Early College students standing outside the Timothy J. Nelson Innovation CenterFebruary 18, 2026

More area high school students are getting a head start on degrees and careers through record enrollment at NMC this spring.

Combined, 613 high school students were dual enrolled or in Early College at NMC this spring, up from the previous record of 544 set just last fall. High school students now constitute 19.3%, or nearly one in five, of the 3,188 students enrolled.

The increase comes despite the fact that overall spring semester enrollment is lower than fall’s, as is typical. Spring-to-spring overall enrollment is up 1.2% from spring 2025.

“More students continued on, and we were able to get more students interested and enrolled,” said NMC Admissions director Lisa vonReichbauer.

Offering opportunities for high school students is one of the top two priorities of local residents, according to NMC’s latest Community Attitudes & Awareness survey.

Hence NMC put an all-out effort on financial, communication and programming fronts into affording residents those opportunities, including a special tuition rate. Tuition for both dual enrollment and early college is paid by local school districts, but until two years ago, the tuition rate for students outside Grand Traverse County left a difference that families paid out of pocket. In January 2024, NMC trustees approved a rate for out-of-district dual enrolled students that eliminates that out of pocket expense.

Equipped with that new rate, vonReichbauer said NMC has improved outreach to both high schools and families, including home school families.

“We’ve communicated better about the opportunities, so we’re seeing more people taking advantage of that,” she said.

Beyond saving money and a head start, research shows that students who dual-enroll in a college class or Early College students, who earn an associate degree in just one year, are more likely to get to the finish line – graduation.

“It increases college going skills, college success and college completion,” vonReichbauer said.

Most students can dual enroll as early as their sophomore year, take up to 10 classes and choose from more than 100 courses. However, each high school handles dual enrollment differently and NMC defers to each individual high school’s requirements.

Fall enrollment for all students, including dual enrolled, starts March 11. Find out more about opportunities for high school students.