Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought the five-year plan was normal nowadays, especially for engineering.
it is very much the norm. Most kids don't graduate in 4 years anymore.
My brother studied engineering and it took him 5 years as well.
There's nothing wrong with it.
All these state school people need to stop weighing in. They don't know what they are talking about. At Ivies people do NOT take more than four years to graduate during normal times. That is considered weird.
+1. RBG's husband went through literal cancer treatment back in the 50s and still finished Harvard Law School on time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought the five-year plan was normal nowadays, especially for engineering.
it is very much the norm. Most kids don't graduate in 4 years anymore.
My brother studied engineering and it took him 5 years as well.
There's nothing wrong with it.
All these state school people need to stop weighing in. They don't know what they are talking about. At Ivies people do NOT take more than four years to graduate during normal times. That is considered weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought the five-year plan was normal nowadays, especially for engineering.
it is very much the norm. Most kids don't graduate in 4 years anymore.
My brother studied engineering and it took him 5 years as well.
There's nothing wrong with it.
Anonymous wrote:I thought the five-year plan was normal nowadays, especially for engineering.
Anonymous wrote:It is a pandemic. Some kids took gap years last year. The road in life is not straight and having hard conversations is a life skill he will need for the rest of his life.
I take it cost is not an issue for your family?
Anonymous wrote:Anyone sugarcoating must not familiar with Ivies. It's going to be super awkward in May when all of his friends are graduating and moving into adulthood and he is the bum in street clothes with another year to go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Smart kids loaded up on easy online courses to graduate early.
![]()
And what did they actually learn? Oh, the ONLY goal was to graduate early. I get it. The goal wasn't to gain any knowledge or skills. I pity their future employers.
My niece at Vanderbilt only has to take three courses total between August to May of her senior year, so her summer internship is paying her to work remote full-time all school year. I’d say that’s a far better position than OP’s son finds himself in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought the five-year plan was normal nowadays, especially for engineering.
Oh no not at all. Schools care about their stats. 92% graduation rate in 4 years at MIT.
MIT was quick to push someone out onto medical leave if and when they needed it rather than have them fail out.
MIT’s 4 yr is 87%
In other words, 13% of MIT leaves to found a company or with an offer from tech, drop out, or health leave — not 13% healthy underachievers just randomly quitting cyber courses and falling behind.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone sugarcoating must not familiar with Ivies. It's going to be super awkward in May when all of his friends are graduating and moving into adulthood and he is the bum in street clothes with another year to go.