Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to community college for five years and didn't transfer and never felt any stigma, and that's WITH coming from a family where I'm the only one without a grad school degree.
Five years?! That can't have been full time. Did you earn your associates?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After 2 years, most community college students end up transferring to a university, with many of them transferring to flagships, and are in just as good as, if not better, standing than most of their peers from high school who went straight to university.
First start with your premise. First of all most do not end up transferring. A lot of the degrees offered at community colleges are terminal degrees.
Maybe 10% of community college students ever finish a four-year bachelor's degree. This idea community colleges are full of savvy smart kids taking cheap courses before they transfer to the state flagship is an absurd internet message board fabrication.
I agree with you, but I'd be curious to see hard stats. Do you have them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After 2 years, most community college students end up transferring to a university, with many of them transferring to flagships, and are in just as good as, if not better, standing than most of their peers from high school who went straight to university.
First start with your premise. First of all most do not end up transferring. A lot of the degrees offered at community colleges are terminal degrees.
Maybe 10% of community college students ever finish a four-year bachelor's degree. This idea community colleges are full of savvy smart kids taking cheap courses before they transfer to the state flagship is an absurd internet message board fabrication.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After 2 years, most community college students end up transferring to a university, with many of them transferring to flagships, and are in just as good as, if not better, standing than most of their peers from high school who went straight to university.
First start with your premise. First of all most do not end up transferring. A lot of the degrees offered at community colleges are terminal degrees.
Anonymous wrote:The average community college is full of dregs of society; felons, registered sex offenders, drug addicts, kids who finished in the very bottom of their public high school, and many who never even graduated from high school. Anyone can sign up for community college courses; 80-90% are just there to waste their time and steal financial aid refunds.
Why would you put your teen, in the prime of their life, in such a setting? How is that an inspiring, competitive, or uplifting ethos?
You going to be thrilled when your gullible son comes home and tells you his new girlfriend is some tatted up stripper he met in sociology 101? Or your daughter tells you her new boyfriend is some drug dealer she met in the community college cafeteria?
Anonymous wrote:I went to community college for five years and didn't transfer and never felt any stigma, and that's WITH coming from a family where I'm the only one without a grad school degree.
Anonymous wrote:After 2 years, most community college students end up transferring to a university, with many of them transferring to flagships, and are in just as good as, if not better, standing than most of their peers from high school who went straight to university.
Anonymous wrote:After 2 years, most community college students end up transferring to a university, with many of them transferring to flagships, and are in just as good as, if not better, standing than most of their peers from high school who went straight to university.