Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I've taught at community colleges. What you're sharing is basically 1 in 500,000 odds.
Community colleges are disgusting - full of degenerates, mentally unstable, druggies, flunkies, ex cons, terminally unmotivated.
Of course a savvy kid can navigate and make something out of nothing, but why would you want your child to waste one minute of their life in that environment? Life is way too short.
Huge exaggeration.
When I went, there are tons of intelligent, lower middle class and working class kids. Maybe your observation is true in the northeast, where community colleges are stigmatized to the point that people will pay a fortune to go to a mediocre private before just doing the first two years at a CC and then transferring to a decent state school.
Sure, one in ten are scrappy lower middle and working class kids - handful of first-gen Asians transfer into the flagship public U. The other 80-90% are degenerate, going nowhere - completion rates back this up. Overall it's not a stimulating environment, classes are a joke, students are helpless. If you're desperate and it's your only option, do what you have to do. If you can avoid it, avoid it. That's all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I've taught at community colleges. What you're sharing is basically 1 in 500,000 odds.
Community colleges are disgusting - full of degenerates, mentally unstable, druggies, flunkies, ex cons, terminally unmotivated.
Of course a savvy kid can navigate and make something out of nothing, but why would you want your child to waste one minute of their life in that environment? Life is way too short.
Huge exaggeration.
When I went, there are tons of intelligent, lower middle class and working class kids. Maybe your observation is true in the northeast, where community colleges are stigmatized to the point that people will pay a fortune to go to a mediocre private before just doing the first two years at a CC and then transferring to a decent state school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I heard from someone (works for a high end consulting co) that said going to community college will affect future employment prospects with high end companies that typically go as far back as the High school you went to when doing their due diligence. Is this true or was he pulling a fast one?
This must be a joke.
I know several of my former high school students who went to community college, then transferred to UMD College park, then went to Medical School at John Hopkins, GW or Georgetown and are surgeons or department heads.
I've taught at community colleges. What you're sharing is basically 1 in 500,000 odds.
Community colleges are disgusting - full of degenerates, mentally unstable, druggies, flunkies, ex cons, terminally unmotivated.
Of course a savvy kid can navigate and make something out of nothing, but why would you want your child to waste one minute of their life in that environment? Life is way too short.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I heard from someone (works for a high end consulting co) that said going to community college will affect future employment prospects with high end companies that typically go as far back as the High school you went to when doing their due diligence. Is this true or was he pulling a fast one?
This must be a joke.
I know several of my former high school students who went to community college, then transferred to UMD College park, then went to Medical School at John Hopkins, GW or Georgetown and are surgeons or department heads.
Anonymous wrote:If they got into a 4 yr school, they should go - - they earned it.
Anonymous wrote:I heard from someone (works for a high end consulting co) that said going to community college will affect future employment prospects with high end companies that typically go as far back as the High school you went to when doing their due diligence. Is this true or was he pulling a fast one?
Anonymous wrote:I started out at a community college. This had less to do with grades, or maturity, and more to do with socialization. Almost everyone I knew went to a CC and then transferred to the local state university, except for a handful of wealthy kids, who went away to nice colleges.
I ended up dropping out after a few semesters and started working full-time in a customer support call center, for under $10 an hour (this about 20 years ago) because I wanted to move out of the house. This was before average people had access to so much information about applying for scholarships and financial aid. In hindsight, I wish I had applied because I had good grades and test scores, and probably would have gotten a decent deal from a good school.
I did eventually finish a master's degree at a decent public flagship, and even made Phi Beta Kappa at my undergrad, but I had to work my way through college, while holding down a stressful call center job. I also had basically no social life during this period because all of my time was either at work or school.
The main problem with community colleges is the dropout rates are sky high. This is due to a combination of dealing with kids from lower socioeconomic backgrounds and the general lack of personal attention. A less competitive, but nice, private might be a better choice to at least ensure that your child graduates before getting a $10/hour "full time job."
Anonymous wrote:I heard from someone (works for a high end consulting co) that said going to community college will affect future employment prospects with high end companies that typically go as far back as the High school you went to when doing their due diligence. Is this true or was he pulling a fast one?
Anonymous wrote:then you're have an immature, scaredy cat, degree-less child forever living with you.