Disney Dork
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2008
- Messages
- 1,045
like 90% of what you just said was really, really wrong.
i went to a comm college in high school, and now i'm at a university. the comm college and my state university had the same cost per credit hour (if the comm college wasn't actually more expensive)
While I do understand some of what you have said, I do disagree on some points. I think it probably depends on what state you're actually attending college in, because I am taking 4 classes this semester (and I am currently attenting a com. college- will be transfering next year). All of them together add up to a total cost of $533 and I'm going to be earning a total of 13 credit hours by taking them.
At UNT (the college I am going to be transfering to), the cost of earning 13 credit hours is $2,732.75.
community COLLEGES don't offer the different specialization like a school of basic and applied sciences, human sciences, and business, etc. it just does general education.
This isn't neccesarily true either, especially in my case. At my school, they have an entire department dedicated to people who want to be teachers. We can't even be advised by the normal advisers. We have to go through the Teaching Center, who then specializes our classes depending on what type of teacher we want to be. The degree I'm working on getting now isn't a 'general' degree. It is called the "Associate in Sciences Degree with an Emphasis in Teaching EC-4". I'm taking a lot more than just the basic core classes. Along with those, I have already had to do a case study, observe in 3 different elementry schools and teach 3 different lessons to a 2nd grade class.
universites typically have a much broader gen ed than a comm college. and it doesn't actually take two years to finish your general ed, because at a university you have specified gen-ed for your major. by the end of your sophomore year, you should already have a lot of major specific hours finished.
Look at what I wrote above. ^^
Right now, I am taking an Elementary Math course, which focuses on how to learn different math concepts and be able to explain them properly to a elementary and middle school student. We do math (College level, not elm/middle school level), and then learn how to explain how to do the problems to a class, just like we will have to do in our classrooms later. If that's not specified to our major, then I don't know what is. >__>