Is your teen ready for college?
TandemEDU has filled over 2,000 college seats! Our students have an average GPA of 3.75!
Our effective, deliberate, unique program successfully prepares teens for the rigors of early college.
What skills are needed for college success?
Since 2016, TandemEDU has enrolled our students in over 2,000 seats in college classes. Most TandemEDU students begin college at 14 or 15 years old. Our students have an average GPA of 3.75 and attribute their success to the accountability and support TandemEDU provides. Our students begin college in World Geography and finish the class, on average, with a final grade of 95%. Why are TandemEDU students so successful in dual enrollment? Our students recently shared their college experience by answering these questions:
- What are the most important skills for early college success?
- What has been the key to your college success?
- What does time management look like in college?
- What resources helped you succeed in college classes?
- Can younger students succeed in dual enrollment?
FREE Middle School Skills Workshop!
“MIDDLE SCHOOL SUCCESS”
Parents with middle and high school students will learn how to prepare students for college, career, and life during this helpful walkthrough the teen years.
Middle school is a critical time for physical, emotional, and spiritual growth. Significant intellectual processes are emerging, hormones are raging and independence is growing. Emerging teens need training in a host of other areas to be successful in high school, college, career, and life. You’ll learn how to use academics as a tool to teach skills like time management, teamwork, computer literacy, organization, problem-solving, and responsibility.
Planning Guide
Your 4-year guide for high school success.
Skills Checklists
Your list for middle/high school success.
Program Staff
Meet our Administrators, Teachers and Facilitators.
TandemEDU Degree Plan
Our College Partner

“TandemEDU students achieve a college GPA HIGHER than that of the average dual-enrolled student.” Read More