Anonymous wrote:I wonder if kids who do this will regret it 10 or 20 years down the line? Like that whole eager to grow up thing, undergrad is soooo lame and passe.![]()
...then in 20 years you realize how much fun and carefree college was.
Don't get me wrong, rather have our children graduate early than take 5 6 7 years to finish. But I don't really get the rush to finish and leave campus in 3 or 3.5 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gen z is smarter and better than x
Generation X didn't have all the AP offerings that Gen Z has.
Gen x dumb as rocks, boomers dinner than rocks
. I know more than a few “rich” kids who pay full freight graduating early because of the tuition.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I graduated 3 semesters early because I was poor, not because I was rich. I wouldn’t let my kids graduate in December because it’s the wrong time for the job search markets for top entry level positions.
+1. Exactly. The rich kids are happy to hang out in school with their parents paying the bill. It’s the poorer ones who want to get their degree ASAP and get out and get earning.
Anonymous wrote:AP credits. IB rarely counts unless you get a 7, maybe.
I graduated from Masters program in December, and it was totally fine. I interned for a big 4 consulting firm in the summer before graduation. They gave all interns a full time job offer with a start date of their choice - January or June, depending on their graduation date.Anonymous wrote:I graduated 3 semesters early because I was poor, not because I was rich. I wouldn’t let my kids graduate in December because it’s the wrong time for the job search markets for top entry level positions.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve worked in higher ed for 25 years. Well over half of all low and middle income college students never graduate. Transferable AP credits (3s 4s and 5s) are largely an upper middle and rich kid thing, sadly. Graduating early is typically a savvy move by striver upper middle class kids who leverage APs and maybe one semester of summer courses.