I want to go to college-and I've got a few questions.
Hey!Geuss what?I'm studying more and extra hard so I can go to college early.I want to study writing and music.I just wannah know though-
1.You do 4 years of college right?
2.Is it harder than regular school?
3.What time do you usually get off?
I may ask more later.By the way-anynoe else here going to college early or went to college early?
_________________
Live and let live.
College councelors are not useful. Just
follow your desired transfer sheets, get good
grades in both difficult and easy classes, and
best of all enjoy. Since you are either AS/HFA
try a study group that shares your interests
since they will be more receptive to you.
Good Luck!
Sincerely,
Ghosthunter
P.S: follow your strengths and be creative
in how you choose your career. "Follow your heart"
and be-true-to-yourself, not others(they will eventually
go away and you will still be with yourself)
1.You do 4 years of college right?
2.Is it harder than regular school?
3.What time do you usually get off?
I may ask more later.By the way-anynoe else here going to college early or went to college early?
What grade are you in now?
_________________
I'm Alex Plank, the founder of Wrong Planet. Follow me (Alex Plank) on Blue Sky: https://bsky.app/profile/alexplank.bsky.social
It depends on your major, and also the college you go to. A bachelor's degree (the most common, especially for writing/music) generally takes four years.
Yes, the classes are harder.
You get pretty much the same breaks that you get in high school.
I'm a freshman at college. I wouldn't recommend going to college early. Finish high school, becase a strong knowledge foundation is really really needed for college.
Last edited by ghotistix on 01 Apr 2005, 3:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.
JayShaw
Sea Gull
Joined: 7 Oct 2004
Age: 44
Gender: Male
Posts: 231
Location: Alexandria, Virginia (United States)
Not sure if colleges are different in Massachusetts than they were for me in Texas, but my replies are somewhat different than ghotistix's.
1.You do 4 years of college right?
It depends on various things, including the number of credit hours you take per semester, the number of credit hours required for the degree you are seeking, the number of credit hours you can obtain by taking College Level Examination Placement (CLEP) or Advanced Placement (AP) examinations, whether you deviate from your degree plan, and whether you fail any classes. A rule of thumb is that it takes 2 years to obtain an Associate's Degree, 4 years for a Bachelor's Degree, 6 years for a Master's Degree, and 8 years for a Doctoral Degree, but your experience may vary based on the factors I mentioned above. For example, I obtained my Bachelor's Degree in 3 years due to the fact that I had 60 credit hours from CLEP and AP examinations.
2.Is it harder than regular school?
In terms of the hours you have to spend in class, college is far easier than high school. However, you also have to have the initiative to study and complete projects on your own. Furthermore, a large percentage of your grades in college are typically based on tests. If you go to a university where class sizes are particularly large, there's a reasonable chance that your entire grade in many classes will be based entirely upon a few multiple choice examinations. Depending on your aptitude, this can be positive or negative. For me personally, college (particularly undergraduate school) was a breeze compared to high school.
3.What time do you usually get off?
The way that class times for college are structured is far different than the way they are structured for high school. A typical class is 3 credit hours, which means that you spend 3 hours attending that class in a given week. A class will usually be held on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays for 1 hour, Tuesdays and Thursdays for 1.5 hours, or Mondays and Wednesdays for 1.5 hours, although single day sessions of 3 hours are not unusual. Your schedule will depend upon the courses you select. The university you attend will provide you with a course catalog indicating which times various courses are held.
Gah, I mixed up Bachelor's and Master's
1. Yeah, 4 years if you are going full time, sometimes that means 15 units a semester which i never take more then 12. My friend is getting his bachelors this spring after 9 years of school because he chose to work full time while going to school. Don't rush. Take as much time as you need.
2. kinda. more advanced is the better term. More responsibility needs to be taken. Show up to class every day and keep in touch with your professors. Take notes and recopy them when studying.
3. Depends when you schedule your classes. Some people wanna sleep in. I start at 9am so that i can be done early.
notes: Get your generals out of the way first. They are annoying if you leave them for later. Plus, it gives you time to change your major in case you find something else. It is estimated that the average person changes their career 5 times. Hope i helped.
AK
_________________
Uncle Joe loves labor
I started taking college classes when I was in 11th grade. It was actually really cool, cause the atmosphere was a lot different from high school. No cliques, and people were there because they wanted to be there, because they wanted to learn, not because someone was forcing them. (I was taking upper level classes, so I don't know if it's worse in freshman classes.) People respected you if you were good at the subject.
If you have a decent amount of AP or transfer credit and if you don't have a difficult major, it will take 4 years to get a Bachelor's degree. But it's actually more common nowadays to require 5 years.
I graduated in 4 years and a summer. (It would have been on time, but I had a really lousy senior year.)
Maybe.
In college, there isn't a fixed 7-hour day like there is in high school. Your last class is whenever you want it to be (constrained to the times your courses are offered), and you can have very different schedules on different days of the week. For example, this semester, I'm in class from 10:20-11:10 am on MWF, but from 2:20-5:10 pm on Tuesday and Thursday.
I disagree. I took 4 "core curriculum" courses (Microeconomics, Technical Writing, State & Local Government, and Art History) when I was a senior, and they were a refreshing break from all my tough 400-level CPSC classes.
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