Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are over 1,000 four year colleges in the US. The question isn’t why a kid goes to 101-1,499. The question is why do you think the normal thing to do needs explaining, or apologies, or reasons? Why are you so afraid of falling out of the elite that you pathologize the normal, typical thing for a young person to do?
This! What the actual F?! Having spent almost my entire life in northern Virginia, I know tons and tons of people who currently attend or did attend JMU and every last one of them love/d it. It is ranked #148 per USNWR right now. And actually, I know several very successful people in their 40's/50's who attended JMU. OP, you live in some weird bubble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are over 1,000 four year colleges in the US. The question isn’t why a kid goes to 101-1,499. The question is why do you think the normal thing to do needs explaining, or apologies, or reasons? Why are you so afraid of falling out of the elite that you pathologize the normal, typical thing for a young person to do?
It's only been the "normal thing to do" for average to below average academically strong people to go to college in the last 20 years or so. Before that, people went into trades, opened business, or worked for companies.
I have the same question as OP but mine is more in the context of does it make more financial sense for people in a 101-1500 school to just start working any job after high school or go to trade school and get technical training to start moving up immediately. Start saving sooner. Not have to pay insane tuition.
Why do the 4 year education if it won't do anything for them? And possibly make their lives more difficult?
this is baloney.
i graduated high school in 1982 and even then the average/below average kids were all going to college. i am not sure if i know a single kid from my class that **didn't** go to college.
Actually according to data I easily found using something called Google, the % of college bound hs graduates increased significantly from 1995-2000. Prior to that it was marginally increasing linearly. And 2010 was a huge jump.
So maybe you lived in a highly educated echo chamber.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are over 1,000 four year colleges in the US. The question isn’t why a kid goes to 101-1,499. The question is why do you think the normal thing to do needs explaining, or apologies, or reasons? Why are you so afraid of falling out of the elite that you pathologize the normal, typical thing for a young person to do?
It's only been the "normal thing to do" for average to below average academically strong people to go to college in the last 20 years or so. Before that, people went into trades, opened business, or worked for companies.
I have the same question as OP but mine is more in the context of does it make more financial sense for people in a 101-1500 school to just start working any job after high school or go to trade school and get technical training to start moving up immediately. Start saving sooner. Not have to pay insane tuition.
Why do the 4 year education if it won't do anything for them? And possibly make their lives more difficult?
this is baloney.
i graduated high school in 1982 and even then the average/below average kids were all going to college. i am not sure if i know a single kid from my class that **didn't** go to college.
Anonymous wrote:There are over 1,000 four year colleges in the US. The question isn’t why a kid goes to 101-1,499. The question is why do you think the normal thing to do needs explaining, or apologies, or reasons? Why are you so afraid of falling out of the elite that you pathologize the normal, typical thing for a young person to do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the reason?
Student WILL be. 2.6 GPA/1150 SAT
What happened?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are any of you engaging in this nonsense post? Smdh.
Guess what you just did. Guess you went to a top infinity college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are over 1,000 four year colleges in the US. The question isn’t why a kid goes to 101-1,499. The question is why do you think the normal thing to do needs explaining, or apologies, or reasons? Why are you so afraid of falling out of the elite that you pathologize the normal, typical thing for a young person to do?
It's only been the "normal thing to do" for average to below average academically strong people to go to college in the last 20 years or so. Before that, people went into trades, opened business, or worked for companies.
I have the same question as OP but mine is more in the context of does it make more financial sense for people in a 101-1500 school to just start working any job after high school or go to trade school and get technical training to start moving up immediately. Start saving sooner. Not have to pay insane tuition.
Why do the 4 year education if it won't do anything for them? And possibly make their lives more difficult?
this is baloney.
i graduated high school in 1982 and even then the average/below average kids were all going to college. i am not sure if i know a single kid from my class that **didn't** go to college.