Originally posted by CJMickeyMouse
IMO, if a student has the academics, funds, focus and maturity to go to a four year school out of high school, then they should do just that.
I honestly do not think that CC are just for those people who can't "hack it" in a University. To give you a little back ground on me before I explain my views. I was in the top 5% of my graduating class of approximately 600. I took honors and AP classes, was in GSP, took dual enrollment classes, impressive SAT and ACT scores, and was involved in lots of academically geared extracurricular. I was guaranteed the FL merit scholarship, but I was going to toss that aside for what I thought to be the path I was destined to take. All my top university choices were out of state. I was accepted to every one of them. During my senior year my grandmother, who lived with us, was diagnosed with cancer. My mother had to work, so I was the only one who was available to take her to her chemo and radiation appointments. I did not go away to college like I had planned on. Instead I went to my local CC so that I could stay at home and help with the responsibility of caring for my grandmother. I would be lying to say that I wasn't extremely discouraged and mad at the whole situation. Before starting classes at the CC you needed to meet with a counselor to discuss what classes you would need to take. I sat down in the counselors office, and she brought out my high school transcripts to discuss what credits I would have coming in from my AP scores and dual enrollment. She took one look at it and turned to me and said, "Why in the world are YOU attending a CC?" I lost it and started crying right there.
I was so sure that everything I had worked for was going to be over, that the AP grades and SAT scores wouldn't matter any more, and that I was resigned to a second rate education. I was going to the CC, the place where the athletes who weren't scholarship material, or the dumb pretty girls, or the class slackers were going, when all of my friends were attending 4-year schools. I was angry at the world, and felt horrible at the same time, because I blamed much of my anger on my grandmother. November of my first semester at the CC my grandmother passed away. I can't even explain how badly I felt that in my mind, even if I had never vocalized it, I blamed her. I decided that since I was currently going to school for free I might as well continue at the CC. I finished the AA degree in a year graduating with a 4.0 average and transferred to a FL state university. Because of the agreement FL state schools have with all FL accredited CC, all of my credits transferred, and I was able to start in as a junior when most people I had gone to HS with were still working on their sophomore year.
I agree that I never got to experience the dorm living, or the frat party lifestyle, but that was never who I was anyways. I wasn't into all that stuff. I intend to graduate early with my BA in Dec. with two majors. After which I am considering one of two paths, either a masters in one or both of my undergrad majors or law school. And let me tell you something, I will have no "CATCHING UP" to do if I do decide to become a lawyer.
I do think that if circumstances were different and I was able to go off to a University right out of high school I would have most definitely done so. The reasons that I did not go right to University however do not fit into your mold for the CC student. I didnt have academic troubles, or money troubles, or maturity troubles, or trouble deciding what I wanted to do with my life. I was needed somewhere. Somewhere that was more important than N.O. or Boston, or D.C. I think to classify all CC students as kids who "can't hack it" is doing a serious disservice to the academic community.
Not all CC are pillars of academia, but again not all Universities are those either. I think it is more important to look at a school's worth first, then judge a student based on their performance within those parameters, instead of lumping all CC students into the lot of "losers who can't hack it at a BIG time University" like I once thought.