powellrj
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2003
- Messages
- 20,254
We are on #3 and all of the took a different path.
#1 started at community college, hated school and joined the army. He went back to community college after the army and found most of the classes didn't transfer when he went to a 4 year school. They assured him they would, but it is what it is. He is now in a small local private college and loves it. The 4 year school has so much more to offer than the community college did and he is thriving now at school. The GI-Bill is paying for his school, so that was the great thing about the army for him.
#2 goes to a state school. Lets just say he was what you think of when you hear frat boy. He loved the frat lifestyle and lived it to the fullest. He is now a 5th year senior and has finally settled down and will graduate in May. He will be paying student loans for the rest of his life, but I will say, he has learned alot about life and has learned lessons many people don't learn until much later. Believe it or not, I do think his job prospects are good at this point, but he will be making his own way and is working on a ground floor project that has lifelong potential. He could write the book on how Not to do college and come out debt free.
DD is #3. She is valedictorian of her class and has lots of awards and honors. Her experience is 100% different than her brothers. She has decided on a medium size private school. They have early admission weekend this weekend so we are going up to pick her classes and dorm.
Somethings we have learned over the years. There are somethings more important than money when picking schools. She has had schools offer more money, but the fit wasn't as good as the school she picked. She has loved this school for several years and has been attending lots of activities there before she even thought about being a student.
Keep taking the SATS and ACTS. Every time she takes them she gets more money from the school. Last time, she only raised her score a few points, but it was worth $2000!
Really talk to people before you decide to play a sport or attend the honors college. It tends to consume your life. Her coach was talking up playing golf, but her student advisor talked her out of it. She is taking a 5 year course of study in 4 years so things like The Honors College and sports really take a huge bite out of you time. Her advisor told her he had only had one student be successful playing a sport and keeping up with school in all of his year of teaching.
Apply for all the small scholarships. Sure $500 doesn't seem like much, but it adds up. She got a call last night that she had gotten $500 for an essay she wrote and mailed to a club her brother is a member of. Those $500 add up fast! She had tried for many bigger ones and didn't get those, but has found the smaller ones easier.
#1 started at community college, hated school and joined the army. He went back to community college after the army and found most of the classes didn't transfer when he went to a 4 year school. They assured him they would, but it is what it is. He is now in a small local private college and loves it. The 4 year school has so much more to offer than the community college did and he is thriving now at school. The GI-Bill is paying for his school, so that was the great thing about the army for him.
#2 goes to a state school. Lets just say he was what you think of when you hear frat boy. He loved the frat lifestyle and lived it to the fullest. He is now a 5th year senior and has finally settled down and will graduate in May. He will be paying student loans for the rest of his life, but I will say, he has learned alot about life and has learned lessons many people don't learn until much later. Believe it or not, I do think his job prospects are good at this point, but he will be making his own way and is working on a ground floor project that has lifelong potential. He could write the book on how Not to do college and come out debt free.
DD is #3. She is valedictorian of her class and has lots of awards and honors. Her experience is 100% different than her brothers. She has decided on a medium size private school. They have early admission weekend this weekend so we are going up to pick her classes and dorm.
Somethings we have learned over the years. There are somethings more important than money when picking schools. She has had schools offer more money, but the fit wasn't as good as the school she picked. She has loved this school for several years and has been attending lots of activities there before she even thought about being a student.
Keep taking the SATS and ACTS. Every time she takes them she gets more money from the school. Last time, she only raised her score a few points, but it was worth $2000!
Really talk to people before you decide to play a sport or attend the honors college. It tends to consume your life. Her coach was talking up playing golf, but her student advisor talked her out of it. She is taking a 5 year course of study in 4 years so things like The Honors College and sports really take a huge bite out of you time. Her advisor told her he had only had one student be successful playing a sport and keeping up with school in all of his year of teaching.
Apply for all the small scholarships. Sure $500 doesn't seem like much, but it adds up. She got a call last night that she had gotten $500 for an essay she wrote and mailed to a club her brother is a member of. Those $500 add up fast! She had tried for many bigger ones and didn't get those, but has found the smaller ones easier.