OnTheBounce wrote:I think that 90+% of people in college today don't belong there. What they really need is a good technical/vocational school so they don't have to worry about all of those things they will have to take courses on in college and can concentrate on learning their profession.
Depends on what field though. In the IT industry an Assocaites degree isn't worth much, just check the job listings... "evelenty billion years of experiance"... "grand masters degree of all knowing (+5/+5)".... etc. etc. . But then again, you can always just get the Assoc. and then a bunch of Industry certs, so it's really up to you. Just bear in mind what the course will teach you and how well you think you'll be taught. (I'd still be at the tech college if I had any confindance in the instruction... well also I'd rather have a BA then an Assoc. degree)
And of course, I think the IT industry is gonna be in some for some real shit in five years anyhow, but that's another story.
OTB wrote:If you're not looking into getting exposed to things like the Humanities and other things not directly related to your job, forget college.
That's true, but I will point out that, depending on the course, you might have to get some Gen. Ed. courses at a college to get your Assoc. (For example at my local tech. college I would have to get 17..ish Gen. Ed. credits at my local university to get an Assoc. in Computer Information Systems, this is also true for those in the Net. Tech. course there)
OTB wrote:If you're going to go military, make sure you enlist in a combat arms Military Occupational Specialty (MOS), but not artillery since as a white boy you will stand out like a sore thumb waiting to be hammered. The benefits to this are that you will receive both the Army College Fund as well as the GI Bill. This means that you can go to school and not have to work. (Assuming that you don't eat steak, lobster and caviar every night.) Your military experience will most likely not translate into marketable job skills, but you will get to do things other people only dream about while they jerk off to Counter Strike, and that experience will last you a lifetime.
The reason I, myself, wouldnt' even consider the military is that, if I don't know what I want to be doing in
four years (or three or two or maybe even one) why would I sign something giving four years of my life over to somebody else?