秋季学期在线双学分课程注册:
6月8日至8月18日开放。
大学在线课程每年开设三个学期:
秋季学期15周;春季学期15周;夏季学期10周;
校历见附录。
所修大学课程是旗舰级的百年基督教大学开设,大学高等教育委员会认证,提供的所有课程均获得认证,并且学术严谨、信仰纯正!
通过在线方式,任何高中生都可以在高中毕业前完成大学水平的课程,甚至获得副学士学位。这些课程时长为10周或15周(取决于学期),并使用Brightspace学习管理系统。
设备和浏览器:
我们的课程和系统与 iPad 或 Chromebook 不兼容。我们建议您使用台式机或笔记本电脑,请使用支持的浏览器: 请使用 Google Chrome 或 Firefox
修课资格:
面向年满15周岁且尚未获得高中毕业文凭或GED证书的学生开放。学生注册课程时年龄不得超过21周岁。
采用模块化教学模式,有特定的开始和结束日期。
学生注册大学课程后在一定期限内允许退课,联系学生顾问来退选或放弃课程。
请注意退课截止日期,因为每年都可能发生变化。
修课费用:
性价比极高,相较美国其他同类课程的1/3--1/2价格,是高中毕业后入读大学学费的1/4–1/5价格。
三部分费用:
*学费:每学分110美金(如果3学分,330美金)
*在线电子教材费(依课程需要)
*高中生大学学分衔接管理协调服务:75美金/每科
(含注册管理、选课顾问、其他行政支持等)
课程目录(学分及课程详情见下方附录)
APL 100 - Introduction to Apologetics
APL 100——护教学导论
ART 112A — Art Appreciation
艺术 112A——艺术鉴赏
ART 231A — Photography 1
艺术 231A——摄影 1
BIB 111 OA — Old Testament
BIB 111 OA — 《旧约》
BIB 114 OA — New Testament
BIB 114 OA — 新约圣经
BIO 101 — Biological Life
BIO 101 — 生物生命
BIO 111 — Biological Life Lab
BIO 111 — 生物学实验课
BUS 105A — Business Fundamentals
BUS 105A — 商业基础课程
COM 103 — Public Speaking
COM 103 — 公开演讲
ECO 215 — Economics ECO 215 — 经济学
ENG 102 — English Composition
ENG 102 — 英语写作
ENG 104 OA — Research Writing
ENG 104 OA — 研究性写作
ENG 201 — Introduction to Literature
ENG 201 — 文学导论
ENG 202 — American Literature I
ENG 202 — 美国文学 I
ENG 204 — British Literature I
ENG 204 — 英国文学 I
HIS 185 — Western Civilization
HIS 185 — 西方文明
HIS 203A — America to 1877
HIS 203A — 1877 年之前的美国
HIS 204A — America since 1877
HIS 204A — 1877 年以来的美国
HIS 211A — History of Christianity
HIS 211A — 基督教历史
HUM 229A — C.S. Lewis Film and Literature
HUM 229A — C.S.刘易斯的电影与文学作品
INT 103 — CCU Academy College and Career Prep
INT 103 — CCU 学院:大学与职业准备课程
MAT 114 — College Algebra
MAT 114 — 大学代数
MAT 115 — Pre-Calculus MAT 115 — 微积分预备课程
MAT 212 — Statistics and their Application
MAT 212 — 统计学及其应用
PHL 202 — Introduction to Philosophy
PHL 202 — 哲学导论
POL 202A — The American Political Process
POL 202A — 美国政治进程
PSY 102A — General Psychology
PSY 102A — 普通心理学
PSY 221A — Interpersonal Relationships
PSY 221A — 人际关系
SOC 202A — Marriage and Family
SOC 202A — 婚姻与家庭
THE 201 — Introduction to Theology
201——神学导论
报名注册联络:
contact@wisdomlearningschool.com
第一步:提交注册信息
第二步:按照付款链接支付课程费
第三步:获得大学课程账号后,注册的课程将在开课前一周开放查看和访问
报名邮箱里提交注册信息:
- 学生姓名
- 学生的性别
- 出生日期
- 高中毕业日期
- 学生所在国家/地区
- 学生联系手机号码
- 学生联系地址
- 邮政编码
- 父母/监护人信息(姓名、电话、电子邮件、家庭住址)
- 修课名称
附录———
校历(2026秋-2027夏)






课程学分/概况:
APL 100 - Introduction to Apologetics
3 Credits
This course is an introduction to principles and methodologies of practical Christian apologetics. Multiple apologetic approaches are identified, compared, contrasted, and evaluated as to their strengths and weaknesses.
ART 112A — Art Appreciation
3 Credits
An introduction to the art world and all its aspects: the people who are active in that world, the many kinds of work that are created, the sensations and ideas we receive from those works, and the ways the life of art has transmitted across many times and places.
ART 231A — Photography 1
3 Credits
This course provides an introduction to photography. Emphasis is placed on photography as art.
BIB 111 OA — Old Testament
3 Credits
This course provides an overview of the historical development and fulfillment of God's sovereign plan for both the people and the land of Israel.
BIB 114 OA — New Testament
3 Credits
This course provides the background, content, unity and progression of the New Testament Scriptures. The student will capture an understanding of the life and ministry of Christ, the development of the Church and the unfolding of the New Covenant.
BIO 101 — Biological Life
3 Credits
This course provides students with the relevant knowledge and critical thinking skills to better understand the living world. Living systems on a cellular, organismal, and ecological level will be studied. From real world examples, students will discover the basic concepts surrounding microbiology and plants, animals and ecology, human anatomy and physiology, as well as theories about their origination.
Registering for this course will require the purchase of an eTextbook payable through the course shell in Brightspace.
Corequisites: BIO 111
BIO 111 — Biological Life Lab
1 Credit
This course provides the opportunity to apply knowledge acquired through BIO 102A Biological Diversity in real world situations. Critical thinking skills will be exercised through the application of the scientific method. Worldview, ethical, moral, and spiritual issues related to the course material will also be addressed.
Corequisites: BIO 101
BUS 105A — Business Fundamentals
3 credits
Overview of functional areas (accounting, finance, management, marketing, and computer information systems) and operating environments common to all business and nonprofit organizations.
COM 103 — Public Speaking
3 credits
This course provides an introduction to principles of communication emphasizing public speaking. Aspects of verbal and nonverbal delivery, speech organization, the effective use of supporting material and presentational aids are addressed. Students give several speeches designed to better equip them for future speaking endeavors.
ECO 215 — Economics
3 credits
This course is designed to provide students with the scope and structure of economic principles and their effect on the business enterprise. The distinction between macroeconomics and microeconomics, their relationship to each other and their combined effect on the business sector will be the focus of the course. The student is expected to develop an understanding of the various economic systems, their differences, and the basic elements of a free market economy and the determination of price in a free market economy.
ENG 102 — English Composition
3 credits
In this course, you will learn the effective use of the English language and exploration of rhetorical modes in written composition. A review of structure, purpose, and audience awareness in developing essays is addressed.
ENG 104 OA — Research Writing
3 credits
This course focuses on the development and strengthening skills of effective business and professional communication in both written and oral modes. The course includes heavy emphases on effective research and the process of writing with a particular focus on both academic and business writing. Development of skills in research and writing of formal academic papers: critical thinking, argumentation, and documentation.
ENG 201 — Introduction to Literature
3 credits
Understand, experience, and evaluate poetry, short fiction, essays, and drama genres, both American and multinational.
ENG 202 — American Literature I
3 credits
Representative stories, poems, and documents in American literature from the Colonial era to the early Republic (1776-1830) through the Romantic-transcendentalist period (1830-1860). Includes readings from multiethnic and women writers.
ENG 204 — British Literature I
3 credits
Surveys the history of literature in Britain until 1800 and representative works by influential writers of the periods contained therein.
HIS 185 — Western Civilization
3 credits
This course focuses on the explicitly Christian character of Western Civilization, and how the cultural, intellectual, and spiritual achievements of the West gave birth to the modern world. This course focuses on the history of its foundational civilizations: ancient Israel, Greece, and Rome. Emphasis is also placed on the development of Western Europe through the Middle Ages, Renaissance, and Reformation.
HIS 203A — America to 1877
3 credits
This course provides a survey of American history from colonial times through the American Revolution, Articles of Confederation, the Constitutional and Bill of Rights, War of 1812, migration, slavery, and regionalism. The Civil War and Reconstruction is also covered. Special attentional is given to the tension between states' rights and a confederate form of government and a powerful central government.
HIS 204A — America since 1877
3 credits
This course explores the American experience from the Civil War era to the 1970s. It provides a working knowledge of the facts of American history and an understanding of the interplay of forces that created the fabric of modern-American political, social, and cultural life. Lectures, discussion, films, and selected student presentations are methods of engaging the subject matter.
HIS 211A — History of Christianity
3 credits
This course surveys the history of Christianity from its beginnings through the twentieth century. It stresses the highlights of each era. The course stresses church organization and practice. Additionally, the history of theology, doctrine and spirituality, and the impact of Christianity upon society and society upon Christianity are explored.
HUM 229A — C.S. Lewis Film and Literature
3 credits
Students will examine some of the major works of C. S. Lewis to see how this master storyteller and great communicator used story, and particularly metaphor, to communicate the Christian message to a secular world.
INT 103 — CCU Academy College and Career Prep
3 credits
This course is designed to equip dual enrollment students with the essential skills, strategies, and self-awareness needed to excel in collegiate-level coursework and to discern their unique vocational calling. Students will learn needed skills for academic research, collegiate-level writing, time management, as well as other learning techniques for success in higher education. Through assessments and guided reflection, students will explore their individual strengths, spiritual gifts, and potential career pathways to make informed decisions about academic majors and professional trajectories.
MAT 114 — College Algebra
3 credits
Study of equations, inequalities, functions, graphs, exponents, logarithms.
Registering for this course will require the purchase of an eTextbook payable through the course shell in Brightspace.
MAT 115 — Pre-Calculus
3 credits
Study of functions - polynomial, rational, exponential, logarithmic and trigonometric. Emphasis on representing these functions numerically, graphically, symbolically. A recommended prerequisite course for Calculus I.
Registering for this course will require the purchase of an eTextbook payable through the course shell in Brightspace.
MAT 212 — Statistics and their Application
3 credits
An introduction to statistical analysis as used in various liberal arts disciplines. Descriptive and inferential statistics and attendant research designs will be considered. Students will become familiar with software and its use in analyzing data and decision making.
Registering for this course will require the purchase of an eTextbook payable through the course shell in Brightspace.
PHL 202 — Introduction to Philosophy
3 credits
This course is a survey of many major issues raised over the two-and-a-half millennia of western philosophy. With an emphasis on historical context and development, as well as philosophy’s relationship to Christian thought, this course challenges students to critically explore philosophical questions and introduce them to the great tradition of intellectual inquiry. Special attention will be given to the subjects of truth and knowledge, reality and appearance, mind and body, right and wrong, beauty and the existence of God.
POL 202A — The American Political Process
3 credits
The presidency, Congress, Supreme Court; public bureaucracies, political action groups, public policy analysis, elections, American democratic ideas and reality, and perennial political questions; and current and controversial issues.
PSY 102A — General Psychology
3 credits
This course provides an overview of the field of psychology, including psychological principles, methods, theories, and research broadly applied to various domains within the scope of psychology as a field. Topics from the biological basis of behavior to social applications of psychology are included.
PSY 221A — Interpersonal Relationships
3 credits
This course will examine principles for building and maintaining healthy relationships, including friendships, dating relationships, marriage, and family relationships. Topics will include the exploration of establishing healthy boundaries, communication, conflict management/resolution, and mate selection. Additionally, there will be exploration of personal needs, values and beliefs, and family of origin influences that impact relationships.
SOC 202A — Marriage and Family
3 credits
This course focuses on cultural and biblical perspectives for marriage and family, interpersonal relationships, human sexuality, home management, child and adolescent development, and divorce and remarriage.
THE 201 — Introduction to Theology
3 credits
This course covers basic issues, themes, and categories of Christian theology.
高中生大学学分和AP课有什么不同?
https://www.wisdomlearningschool.com/post/300
高中生修大学学分有哪一些优势好处?
https://www.wisdomlearningschool.com/post/360


