Loading
Loading
Your feedback directly shapes Sporos.
Sign in to track your feedback history
Public high school students; opportunity to earn transferable meta-major associate degree during high school to reduce college debt. Requires the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia, in cooperation with the Virginia Community College System and each associate-degree-granting public institution of higher education and each baccalaureate public institution of higher education, to establish a program by which qualified high school students earn an associate degree in a meta-major through dual enrollment, concurrent enrollment, or a combination thereof, that (i) is fully transferable to any baccalaureate public institution of higher education that offers a program of study in such meta-major and (ii) to the extent possible, satisfies discipline-specific degree requirements in the student's preferred program of study.
Introduced
Jan 8, 2025
Last Action
Feb 17, 2025
Session
VA 2025
Sponsors
1 primary · 1 co
Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (HB2455)
Passed by indefinitely in Finance and Appropriations (13-Y 0-N 1-A)
Reported from Education and Health with substitute and rereferred to Finance and Appropriations (14-Y 0-N 1-A)
Committee substitute printed 25107391D-S1
Assigned Education sub: Public Education
Referred to Committee on Education and Health
Constitutional reading dispensed (on 1st reading)
Read third time and passed House (97-Y 0-N)
Passed House (99-Y 0-N)
Engrossed by House - committee substitute
Read second time
Education Substitute agreed to
Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (HB2455)
Read first time
Committee substitute printed 25106318D-H1
Reported from Education with substitute (22-Y 0-N)
Subcommittee recommends reporting with substitute (8-Y 0-N)
Assigned Educ sub: K-12 Subcommittee
Referred to Committee on Education
Prefiled and ordered printed; Offered 01-08-2025 25104270D
Get a plain-English explanation of what this bill does, who it affects, and why it matters.
Passed by indefinitely in Finance and Appropriations (13-Y 0-N 1-A)
Phillip A. Scott