Dual Enrollment

Bayfront offers 12 sections of dual enrollment classes on site through Southwestern College

Contact your school counselor or Ms. Honeycutt for more information!


Through a partnership with Southwestern Community College, Bayfront is able to offer college level courses-- on site at Bayfront-- at no cost to our students. The "CCAP" program is well established in the South Bay and has provided many students with the opportunity to take more demanding courses, taught by college faculty, and earn simultaneous credit for both college and high school courses.  


Bayfront students may request to take Southwestern courses when they meet with their counselor for course selection each year, usually in February. 


Students must have a minimum overall high school grade point average of 2.5 and are limited to taking no more than eleven units per semester. 


The courses that are being offered in the 2024-25 school year are:


Fall Semester



Spring Semester


​SOUTHWESTERN-BAYFRONT COLLEGE COURSE DESCRIPTIONS:


ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE


Introduces the history and philosophy of criminal justice with an overview of the criminal justice system identifying the various segments and the roles and interrelationships: overview of crime, criminals and causal theories, jurisdiction of local, state, federal criminal justice agencies, survey of professional career opportunities, and ethics and professionalism.



PSYCHOLOGY 101


Introduces the student to the scientific study of human behavior through the analysis of facts, theories, and concepts. Emphasizes biological, social, and cognitive influences on behaviors, such as learning, memory, perception, sexuality, personality, development, psychological disorders, and group behavior. Attention also given to historical developments and experimental techniques.



SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY 


Examines human behavior and personality development in a social context. Includes an investigation of topics such as, social cognition, self identity, social perception, attitudes, conformity, stereotypes, group dynamics, aggression, and altruism.