Did he graduate from high school with at least a year of college credit? |
Cornell too? https://courses.cornell.edu/enrollment-credit-requirements/advanced-placement-standing/ |
+1 My kid finished a STEM degree at Cornell in 3 years (took 1 summer class) using AP scores for credits and advanced placement to satisfy requirements. He used the "extra" year to study for the MCAT, volunteer, gain clinical and lab experience, and apply to Medical Schools. Was just accepted to several med schools. We can use the unused 4th year of 401k funds to help with Medical school. |
| An over-engineered childhood or an ignored one. Nonstop grinding or dumbed-down education. Crazy competitive college admissions, then a shrinking job market to compete with global cheaper labor. AI replacing jobs faster and faster. Housing and healthcare no one can afford. And soon laid-off parents to take care of for years |
They aren’t. Top schools don’t take them as credit and, no, it’s not just because they want you to pay more $$—they are not the same. |
UVA accepts a lot. I know many that graduate early. |
+1 It’s impossible to do at an Ivy. |
Agree! I did some quick math—if DC commutes to Berkeley and graduates in three years, the total cost would be about $72K Totally doable for mc, with more job opportunities too. |
It's impossible for you to read and comprehend a thread before showing off your ignorance by replying, so I'm sure that doing anything at an Ivy is impossible for you |
| I don’t assume they are deliberately rushing. Some people have financial issues and they really need to save the extra money. Others have a long graduate education ahead of them and want to get started. And I’m sure there are those who simply don’t enjoy college. But for my own kids, I wanted them to take their time and enjoy this stage of life because it only comes around once. Attending the full 4 years can allow kids time to double major or take interesting classes outside of their course of study so it’s not wasted time. |
| LOL I saw the title of this post and thought it was about Greek life. |
That’s an expensive way to have a good time. When you choose to go 4 years instead of 3, you are not only paying for that 4th year, you are also not getting paid for working that 4th year. |
| Mine is graduating at 20 and going right into med school. Not rushing at all. |
For med students that’s smart and saves $$. |
🤮 |