Went to one of my classes for the first time this semester (it's week 5) because I heard there was a test. Got 100% and realized I'm paying to show I already know everything they teach.
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Went to one of my classes for the first time this semester (it's week 5) because I heard there was a test. Got 100% and realized I'm paying to show I already know everything they teach.
So, you're a freshman then?
Exactly why I don't want to go to college. I'll pay 120k for a piece of paper and wait 5 years for it. I could spend that 5 years making that money or going further in debt.
I only go when there's a test on an assignment is due (they post them online) and the lowest mark I've gotten so far is a 75. I'm really hoping the third year will have some challenge to it. As of now my advice would be to skip post-secondary if you're confident you can be successful without it.
I know plenty of people ( and people in my family do ) who have gone to college and it hasn't helped them whatsoever in snagging a good job. I don't really see the point of college unless you really enjoy learning ( which I do, but I'm not going to go into huge debt doing it )
Yeah, don't go to college. Cause everyone will just believe you have the skills you say you do.
Aside from that you're in a 3 year program, what did you expect?
This is going to sound bad.
College has a strong emphasis on networking.
Classes are great for learning, but it's a big time sink for skills you "may" use.
LinkedIn is a great tool because you can actually talk to employers, opposed to where I've found that it's my college professors who bring them in.
It'll be interesting to see how the whole education system changes.
I love the stuff they are doing with free online classes lately.
Takes 4 years to get a BA or BS, 3 year programs are accelerated or a technical/vocational program. The former is a full education and the latter is simply training in skips need to preform the job the program relates to. Often if you could do said job before starting the program you learn nothing and merely codify that you have training.
At least in the US that's how it works.
Yeah, college is expensive. I want to go to grad school but I'll need to work a few years before I can swing it.
For cost things..
Look for all the hidden scholarships and stuff.
There are people who apply for every single one, but there's only a handful of them.
Sometimes if you get lucky and you've got requisites they don't you can win them by default.
Other times you just hope. Sometimes school's also have little ones they put up in announcements on school site things, when companies are trying to look good or advertise by giving away a little something something.
its kinda a waste paying alot of money to go to school to prove ur smart