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:I think you just need to hang out with different people. In my circle it is one of many avenues to higher education.
Anonymous wrote:Wow you people are terrible. Most of the kids at my high school ended up at community college. Many of my friends who were straight A students went there because it was an affordable option for their families. About half transferred to bigger schools like Towson, frostburg, and UMD. The rest ended up finishing degrees at UMUC. These friends didnt end up being lawyers but all are employed, as teacher, admin assistant, graphic designer, to name a few. I guess those jobs wouldnt be good enough for the children of DCUMers though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
I'm not your gofer. Just poke around government scorecard.
Ah, so you just throw fake numbers out there. Cool.
DP but please don't be that askhole. You can look up this information yourself. You can go college by college and design your own spreadsheet and then you can come back and tell us all what you learned.
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.
Because top students can get merit scholarships to universities, poor students can get aid, athletes can get scholarships, rich students can get parents to pay so in the end you don't get desired peers who can challenge and help you grow.
That being said, if you don't have better affordable choices or scholarships or grades, go to community college, work your butt off and move to a good school. You'll he fine.
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: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:Anonymous wrote: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?
I'm not your gofer. Just poke around government scorecard.
Ah, so you just throw fake numbers out there. Cool.
Anonymous wrote:If you're one of the few lucky enough to transfer to a state flagship, good luck on being the least prepared (because your CC courses were all a rigor-less joke) and having no friends. Another internet fantasy: When you're 20 years old and transfer to a university as a junior from a community college, you make dozens of fast friends.
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: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?
I'm not your gofer. Just poke around government scorecard.