Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hey OP, I'm 23 and in my final semester of my undergrad. I'll be almost 24 when I graduate. What's the issue? You won't be out of place. Ages in my 4th year/grad courses range from 20-50 - most of us are 22-26. It's really not an issue. Do what's best for your future and will get you the best degree and opportunities. It's silly to base a decision like this on age.
Why? Our time on this earth is finite, and I feel like it's foolish to act like we're going to live forever. At 23, the Average American Male is about a 3rd through his life.
Wow. This poster hits the big 70 this year. I'm a dead duck.
I guess that's why all the aging rockers are dying - their time is up.
Actually though the average age for American males is 76, not 69. And if you've lived to 70, your life expectancy is then longer.
Agree with this pp. I don't know if it is in your best interest to stay at your CSU or transfer to UC. The question in my mind whether you want to go to grad school and, if so, is the UC department prestigious enough to connect you up with people who can help you with that? So look closely at the department. But if you're just looking for employment after college, what may help you most is that you network now and do as many informational interviews as you can with people in the field you're interested in.Anonymous wrote:Hey OP, I'm 23 and in my final semester of my undergrad. I'll be almost 24 when I graduate. What's the issue? You won't be out of place. Ages in my 4th year/grad courses range from 20-50 - most of us are 22-26. It's really not an issue. Do what's best for your future and will get you the best degree and opportunities. It's silly to base a decision like this on age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hey OP, I'm 23 and in my final semester of my undergrad. I'll be almost 24 when I graduate. What's the issue? You won't be out of place. Ages in my 4th year/grad courses range from 20-50 - most of us are 22-26. It's really not an issue. Do what's best for your future and will get you the best degree and opportunities. It's silly to base a decision like this on age.
Why? Our time on this earth is finite, and I feel like it's foolish to act like we're going to live forever. At 23, the Average American Male is about a 3rd through his life.
Wow. This poster hits the big 70 this year. I'm a dead duck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hey OP, I'm 23 and in my final semester of my undergrad. I'll be almost 24 when I graduate. What's the issue? You won't be out of place. Ages in my 4th year/grad courses range from 20-50 - most of us are 22-26. It's really not an issue. Do what's best for your future and will get you the best degree and opportunities. It's silly to base a decision like this on age.
Why? Our time on this earth is finite, and I feel like it's foolish to act like we're going to live forever. At 23, the Average American Male is about a 3rd through his life.
Anonymous wrote:Hey OP, I'm 23 and in my final semester of my undergrad. I'll be almost 24 when I graduate. What's the issue? You won't be out of place. Ages in my 4th year/grad courses range from 20-50 - most of us are 22-26. It's really not an issue. Do what's best for your future and will get you the best degree and opportunities. It's silly to base a decision like this on age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm the OP. I'm getting a BS in mathematics if that makes a difference.
What CSU are you attending?
Anonymous wrote:I'm the OP. I'm getting a BS in mathematics if that makes a difference.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on CSU, UC, and major. Can you commute to the UC you hope to attend and, if not, will that mean you have a significant increase in room & board? What's the tuition differential these days? What kind of grad school are you interested in?
FWIW, my family has both CSU and UC grads. And everyone got the kinds of jobs they were looking for. But there aren't any head to head comparisons since they're in different fields -- eg public school teacher wasn't handicapped by BA/MA from a CSU.