Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Almost everybody who graduates college early was on track to graduate early the moment they graduated high school. These days, it's not unusual to graduate high school with a year or 2 of college credits under one's belt. If you start college on track to graduate in 3 years or less, then you're not compressing anything by graduating in 3 years. The only instance I would consider graduating in 3 years to be rushing is if you entered college with less then a semester's worth of AP credits, but I don't that's terribly common. I greatly overwhelmed myself by graduating in college in 3.5 years, but that's because I only entered with 6 AP credits. I should've taken the full 4 years.
If you think about it, the kid who was redshirted in kindergarten and graduated in 3 years with a bunch of AP credits is learning the same material at the same age as his father who was not redshirted and graduated in 4.
I'd still say most redshirted kids graduate college in 3.5 years, not 3 years flat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School just isn’t fun anymore. It’s not about exploration or making friends. From one year before they start tracking math in your neighborhood, it’s about executive function and taking all the right classes. And it never ends. You might as well stop spending money and start making money, because you’re not having fun anyway.
+1
There isn’t a lot of room for creative exploration in school any more, either at the college or HS level. It is all about the grade grind. That makes it boring and if you are going to grind you might as well get money for it.
Are the kids happier once they start working?
Yes. Working 9-5 with no homework is 100% better
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School just isn’t fun anymore. It’s not about exploration or making friends. From one year before they start tracking math in your neighborhood, it’s about executive function and taking all the right classes. And it never ends. You might as well stop spending money and start making money, because you’re not having fun anyway.
This. If your only goal.is to make good grades and get the highest paying job possible, why not finish as fast as possible? College is essentially trade school to these types..
To “types” that aren’t rich, yeah
+1 seriously
Even though we are UMC, we don't come from money. We earned every penny and actually help family members. Finding yourself in college is a luxury we don't really have.
People who say that college is a "trade school" to us type of people are elitist aholes in their little privileged bubbles who know nothing about how the real world works.
Anonymous wrote:All the AP classes taken in MCPS and going to OOS publics where they accept the APs makes it super easy to graduate in 3 years, saving tens of thousands of dollars, which in our case, can then go toward grad school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School just isn’t fun anymore. It’s not about exploration or making friends. From one year before they start tracking math in your neighborhood, it’s about executive function and taking all the right classes. And it never ends. You might as well stop spending money and start making money, because you’re not having fun anyway.
This. If your only goal.is to make good grades and get the highest paying job possible, why not finish as fast as possible? College is essentially trade school to these types..
To “types” that aren’t rich, yeah
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To take some gap years.
B.S. It's to both save money and start life. It's called opportunity cost. Google it. It's silly to piss away a year of life "taking courses". The magical part of undergrad is that first year and second. After that, mature students are eager to move on. Finish as quickly as you can and either jump into a career or head to medical or law school, so you can quickly finish that and make some real money.
Anonymous wrote:To take some gap years.