So I am intrigued by DCP (I know DS has a bit of time (5 years) before he is even off to college. Does she still go to college full-time while in DCP? Does it extend when you will complete college? I am guessing depending on what your major is DCP may not be a good fit? Pretty sure DS will be doing some in engineering/math/sceience realm.
All that varies by person, but no it doesn't have to extend the time you are in college. Most kids take the full semester off but some take an online course or two. They work alot, so it would be really hard to maintain full time courses while at DCP.
To stay on track, you can plan ahead and have done dual enrollment in high school (good idea even if you aren't DCP) or take classes in the summer. DD did deal enrollment and takes classes in the summer anyways, so DCP didn't put her behind.
For someone who is on a specific track where courses aren't necessarily offered every semester, like nursing, for example, it would be a challenge to do DCP in the last 2 years when you take those core classes. That person would want to do DCP early on in their college career or in the semester following graduation.
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ETA: But, even in you graduate a semester late, who cares? Adulthood is long. An experience like DCP is once in a lifetime.
Here are the reflections my DD posted to social media when she got home:
"...and so our journey comes to an end." I just finished up my 7 month internship with The Walt Disney Company in which I was working in Magic Kingdom assigned to two locations -- Casey's Corner on Main Street USA and the Happily Ever After Fireworks Dessert Party at Tomorrowland Terrace. It was the most challenging 7 months of my life both mentally and physically, but more rewarding than I could have ever possibly imagined almost a year ago when I was praying that this experience would be one full of personal growth.
I could probably go on for hours about all of the different ways that working for Disney World was demanding and exhausting (to say the least). I was scheduled shifts that didn't end until 3 in the morning, I handled my very fair share of no-good, very-bad guests, I washed, rinsed, and sanitized until my hands were so sweaty from the gloves that they smelled like feet, I took the 9 full trash bags from the Casey's dining room to the trash compactor just to turn around and have them be full again by the time I got back, I scooped fries until my face and arms were red from the heat, and I had to flip an entire dessert party with 200 guests over to a brand new dessert party for the after-fireworks guests in a matter of the 18 minutes that Happily Ever After Fireworks provided us to do so.
However, it wasn't all as bad as my complaints make it seem. In fact a lot of it was so good that I've cried about my time here ending. A lot. Every super late night shift led to lots of dancing to the the music coming from the DJ on the castle stage, laughing with coworkers so hard that I almost pee my pants, and so much time to pre-close that we actually got out on time. For every annoying guest there were 25 more that were celebrating a birthday, anniversary, engagement, adoption, you name it, and they chose to spend their celebration at the place I work. I got to give out souvenir Mickey Sippers, baseball brownies, free bottles of water (more valuable than it may sound), have the culinary team make elaborate desserts, bring them plates with special celebration cupcakes and strawberries, even pick out a group wandering around Tomorrowland to join us at the Dessert Party for free. I was making magic at every turn. Every full trash bag I threw over my shoulder and slung into the compactor, every 4 ounce fry boat that disappeared within 3 seconds causing an endless cycle of scooping, every application of lotion because my hands were so dry from hours of wearing gloves to clean or touch anything pretty much anywhere, were worth it because I was making magic. More importantly, I was learning a lot about putting others before myself.
I have always done what was the social norm. I graduated from my high school and went straight to the SEC university that was in my state and joined a sorority. I figured I'd keep doing what I was doing until I graduated. As much as I loathed her for it when I was crying before and after every every shift in February thinking that I couldn't handle this job, I have to thank my mom for pushing me to do this and for not letting me quit no matter how many times I begged her. I am so unbelievably grateful that I left my bubble. A very small amount of people get to say that they worked on Main Street USA or watched the fireworks every single night. I celebrated Valentine's Day, St. Patrick's Day, Easter, Cinco De Mayo, Memorial Day, my 20th birthday, and the Fourth of July in Disney World. People save their whole lives to be able to do just one. I permanently signed my name on one of the beams for the Tron rollercoaster debuting in 2021, I enjoyed every single week of Epcot's Flower and Garden Festival, surprised my friends from school in Ft. Lauderdale, went to bible study on the hub grass in front of Cinderella's Castle, saw the intricate giant Easter eggs at The Grand Floridian, rode Haunted Mansion on its very first day with a ride photo and participated in the one-day-only special perks of that, became friends with others that work for Disney from all over the entire world, bought a Universal Studios annual pass, hosted my Mom, Aunt Amy, Jen, Grandma, Grandaddy, Anderson, Harrington, Hattie, Tara, Daddy, Shawn, Rowan, Sydney, Kate, and Sydney's Aunt Jill, worked the first ever Villains After Hour Event in Magic Kingdom, visited Miami, rode Hagrid's Magical Creatures Motorbike Adventure within days of it opening, discovered a serious love for trying new foods and ate at more restaurants than I could possibly count, got to watch Hercules with my coworkers in PhilharMagic after Magic Kingdom closed for the night, and so much more.
I want to thank my co-workers for putting up with my complaints and attitude and for turning my frowns upside down. Thank you for making fun of me when I deserved it and building me up when I needed it. I've never met a more hardworking, genuine, kind, non-judgmental group of people and I'm lucky to have been part of the TLC crew. You all saw more than what I just portray on the outside and loved me for what is on the inside. I'm never going to forget the time we spent together.
The Disney College Program changed my life not just because I got to hang out in Disney World every day for 7 months, but because I was so challenged and so out of my comfort zone that I was forced to grow as a person. My relationship with Christ and my faith in Him has never been stronger, my perspective on my priorities in life have shifted, and I feel like I know more about myself than I could've ever learned while stuck doing what everyone else around me was doing. All it took was some faith, trust, and pixie dust.
"And let us not forget one thing -- that it all started with a mouse."