| I'm a returning student about to complete my degree at the end of this year. I went to an art school for a few years out of high school and ended up in customer service positions with some great companies. I didn't want to continue in customer service, so I decided to go back to school. Started with two years at community college, and now finishing up my last two at university. Some insights I picked up along the way: - community college have great professors - community college treats you like the adult you are - community college is underrated - university treats you like a child - university professors are more selfish and self-serving - university is busy dealing with so much extra-curricular stuff that most adults don't care about, it makes you question your decision - Different "schools" within the university do things differently - as an adult, it sucks to work in groups with young students - I picked up way more knowledge in the "real world" than I realized as a lot of what is being taught is redundant - there should be 4 semesters a year, not 2, people should graduate in 2 years, not 4+ At the onset of this journey, I was enthusiastic to learn, but along the way I've been beat down to just wanting to get "the piece of paper" and be done. It's been a long three years and each day forward is increasingly difficult to stomach since I realized I can learn all of what is being taught to me faster on my own. I don't think anyone needs a degree anymore to get to where they're going. However, it does make it easier depending on one's path. |
The professors were underpaid and many of them didn't care -- some did care and were excellent teachers, but a lot of them were bitter about their career outcomes and just went through the motions. My best professors were the ones who had careers outside of the community college and taught part time, including a tenured professor at Stanford and a professional archeologist.
Honestly it's hard for me to recommend community college to people who are driven and dedicated to their educations, because so many of the other people in those institutions are not like that.
If I could go back in time I would gladly borrow an extra $20k to go to a university from the beginning. Over the time scale of a lifetime, or even just a decade, that's not a lot of money.