|
|
|
|
|
by svnsets
3379 days ago
|
|
>Introductory science courses (which I would otherwise not being able to learn on my own) were certainly worth the price I paid for. Out of curiosity, why do you think you would not be able to learn introductory science without spending $800 on a uni course? |
|
I had a lot of a-ha moments in college like that. That is to say, the example above is for something I knew that I didn't know, there were many a-ha of something I didn't know I didn't know. Science courses are often dense and not everyone can easily gasp ideas in the textbooks or online resources without help. I wouldn't know to look up and study chaos theory, game theory, and many other interesting ideas without a primer in college. Plus, being able to interact and ask and see as things progress when the professor explains the problem is quite worth the money to me. Again, MOOC can provide some of those, but with trade-offs (I can't interrupt the professor to ask something everyone understands, but I don't). MOOC was not an option when I went to college though.