Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child graduated from UMD a semester early and there were two cons. Housing the last semester was a little tricky to coordinate and there was no December ceremony.
My DS will graduate from UMD in Computer Engineering in two days one semester early.  He will finish his finals on Friday and he can't wait to leave UMD and start traveling for the next six months in Europe, Asia, and South America, with the tuition/room/board that we will give him, on top of a 50K cash gift from my FIL.  There will be a job waiting for him when he comes back from the trip.  There is no need to spend another useless semester in school for undergrad. Â
How nice for your kid, but most of us donât get to play with $75k straight out of college
I am 46 and still havenât made it overseas
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bad idea unless you are going into non-competitive professional school.
Utterly false. Every year a number of admittees with numerous Governor's School, AP and College courses enter UVA as second-year students. I know several. They graduate in three years and all have moved on to top law schools or MBA or Med school programs. If anything, such initiative is seen as a positive. There are several threads on this topic already here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child graduated from UMD a semester early and there were two cons. Housing the last semester was a little tricky to coordinate and there was no December ceremony.
My DS will graduate from UMD in Computer Engineering in two days one semester early.  He will finish his finals on Friday and he can't wait to leave UMD and start traveling for the next six months in Europe, Asia, and South America, with the tuition/room/board that we will give him, on top of a 50K cash gift from my FIL.  There will be a job waiting for him when he comes back from the trip.  There is no need to spend another useless semester in school for undergrad. Â
Anonymous wrote:My child graduated from UMD a semester early and there were two cons. Housing the last semester was a little tricky to coordinate and there was no December ceremony.
Anonymous wrote:
My niece graduated in 3 years from a flagship university, and I think it was a mistake.
She had a lot of AP credits, and also did a relatively "easy" major (which was especially easy for her because she's very smart and hard-working).
Because she had full financial aid, there would have been no downside to have spent the 4th year taking some classes (perhaps getting a minor) with some practical aspects. Although she is close to her family, she was not open to receiving any advice on this topic, as she is very strong-willed and confident in her decision-making.
The chosen major was impractical, and she is now working in some dead-end jobs while she pursues a fun career. She started all of this age 21, even though college is a unique little period of life and not to be rushed (IMHO).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents joked with me, asking why I didnât do this.
I reminded them that I would have been 20 graduating college and it didnât seem worth it to stress myself squeezing in all those classes for that.
As it was, I had barely turned 21 when I walked in my ceremony. I only took a couple academic classes my senior year and mostly stuff for fun - sign language, dance, several music classes, etc. The fun electives completed my credit requirements.
What's wrong with being 20 or 21 when you graduate? Both of my kids were 20 at graduation. One took a year off and then went to law school, and one went straight into med school.
Anonymous wrote:My parents joked with me, asking why I didnât do this.
I reminded them that I would have been 20 graduating college and it didnât seem worth it to stress myself squeezing in all those classes for that.
As it was, I had barely turned 21 when I walked in my ceremony. I only took a couple academic classes my senior year and mostly stuff for fun - sign language, dance, several music classes, etc. The fun electives completed my credit requirements.