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A) It is early June. Presumably you are not going back to school until September. Make the most of the next three months. Then decide in September. A rough rule of thumb: If you can't find paying work in software, or at least get yourself on a road that will obviously lead to paying work in software in short order (i.e. build and launch something!) in the next three months you'd probably be wise to go back to school. B) What are you studying? Might you rather be studying something else? Are you at the right school? There are other schools: Cheaper ones, larger ones, smaller ones, more serious ones, less serious ones. I have no experience with being unmotivated towards school, so I'm a lousy source of advice. ;) But I'd say that it's better to take some time off of school and search for your true motivation than to go into serious debt in order to spend four years being miserable, earning lousy grades, and barely graduating. You should certainly change something, right now -- your major, your school, your enrollment status, something -- rather than try to just muddle through. College is too expensive to not take seriously. Ultimately, though, I'd be wary of the folks who encourage you to skip college altogether and forever. Anecdotes from successful people are great and all, but by definition not everyone is above average, and the stats continue to tell a different story: People with college degrees get jobs more easily and earn more money. Of course, if you find yourself getting jobs and earning money you can always put off school until the time when you're not... |
I'm currently studying Computer Science. I'm pretty sure that this is the right field for me, because the few moments of true motivation tend to come at the initial phases of personal projects, such as a GolfScript interpreter I'm working on (https://bitbucket.org/bluejeansummer/golfscript). Most everything else (including my CS classes) feels like jumping through hoops, chasing after a degree that I don't think will be worth much when accompanied by bad grades.
A change is certainly in order, and I hope to find something that works over the summer. If I do get a job, I may return to school when I have a reason other than "It's what you do after high school". Otherwise, I hope to have found something that gives me the motivation to get through school.
Thanks for your advice.