Anonymous wrote:What’s the rush? I graduated at 20. I am now 50 yo and burned out. Wish I had taken the time to smell the roses and enjoy the journey.
Anonymous wrote:DS and many of his friends are going to be sophomores when they start college.
Anonymous wrote:My law school friend entered Harvard as a sophomore. She hated the school and applied elsewhere for law school (we went to Berkeley).
Anonymous wrote:If we are bragging... Mine will be a junior after first semester
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s the rush? I graduated at 20. I am now 50 yo and burned out. Wish I had taken the time to smell the roses and enjoy the journey.
+1
I graduated college in 3.5 years. To this day, I wish I had taken the full 4.
I graduated college in 3 years. It was one of the best decisions I've made for myself. Everyone has different experiences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why rush getting out of college, you get so much more out of 4 or 5 years than 3, academically, socially, fun, etc
I would rather my kid take a biology class at a university taught by a well respected college professor than some disgruntled high school teacher with 3 years on the job and no real world experience with a world class lab.
My DS graduated from UVA college of Engineering in 3 years because the school accepted over 30+ credits from his high school AP courses. He graduated in May '23 in three years, and I gave him 44K, the money I would have to pay for his last year at UVA, to travel the world before he comes back and either starts grad school or works for the NSA. Staying in school for 4 or 5 years only benefits the university, NOT you.
Btw, some of those "disgruntled" HS teachers have degrees from MIT or CalTech, something that you do not have. Be respectful....
When he applies for jobs or tries to create something on his own, he's going to be competing against people with a full 4-year education, some including a masters or a double major.
He also missed out on building connections with the top students at his school who spent the 4th year doing the most advanced work leading to stronger post-college placements.
I've worked at Intel, Apple, Google and these companies do NOT cares about where you get your degree from or how long. It comes down to the interview and how well you performed on the actual test given by the company. You might have a Master degree in Engineering but do poorly on the test, you will not be hired.
Anonymous wrote:My law school friend entered Harvard as a sophomore. She hated the school and applied elsewhere for law school (we went to Berkeley).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s the rush? I graduated at 20. I am now 50 yo and burned out. Wish I had taken the time to smell the roses and enjoy the journey.
+1
I graduated college in 3.5 years. To this day, I wish I had taken the full 4.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:why rush getting out of college, you get so much more out of 4 or 5 years than 3, academically, socially, fun, etc
I would rather my kid take a biology class at a university taught by a well respected college professor than some disgruntled high school teacher with 3 years on the job and no real world experience with a world class lab.
My DS graduated from UVA college of Engineering in 3 years because the school accepted over 30+ credits from his high school AP courses. He graduated in May '23 in three years, and I gave him 44K, the money I would have to pay for his last year at UVA, to travel the world before he comes back and either starts grad school or works for the NSA. Staying in school for 4 or 5 years only benefits the university, NOT you.
Btw, some of those "disgruntled" HS teachers have degrees from MIT or CalTech, something that you do not have. Be respectful....
When he applies for jobs or tries to create something on his own, he's going to be competing against people with a full 4-year education, some including a masters or a double major.
He also missed out on building connections with the top students at his school who spent the 4th year doing the most advanced work leading to stronger post-college placements.
DP, but calm down. A student who graduates in 3 years from a decent uni doesn't have much to worry about. They will do well no matter what.
Anonymous wrote:What’s the rush? I graduated at 20. I am now 50 yo and burned out. Wish I had taken the time to smell the roses and enjoy the journey.
Anonymous wrote:What’s the rush? I graduated at 20. I am now 50 yo and burned out. Wish I had taken the time to smell the roses and enjoy the journey.