Well, the further you go along, the more challenging things should get no? Stick it out in the splashy pool for a while and wait until they throw you in with the sharks in the ocean. It'll have to happen eventually.
Or, accelerate things.Learn on your own. Challenge yourself.
Maybe it's not challenging because you're too damn good at it!I also think this should belong in Serious
Just be lucky you don't have to try and you still get good grades while some of us study our asses off and still end up with C's.
Usually the few days leading up to an exam/final. I mean most people can't study all year round.
Things like Playing Baseball and joining a frat were a higher priority than studying. I wish I did have the time to study, just couldn't make the time.And now in grad school I would love to study 24/7. I mean right now I think I have something like a 40 in one of my classes. But work and parenting prevent me from studying, it blows. I'm just saying, you should feel lucky you can study minimally and still do great. I wish I had those brains.
. They are not challenging, and it feels idiotic to do "group assignments" just to deal with the fact that the other person will fuck up things and whatever happens I will have to gather the pieces to put things back together.
When I was in High School and had these group projects.. I told the group.. Don't do anything! I'll do it all and I won't fuck up your grade. They listened and we'd usually walk away with a mid 90 at worst.
But you're assuming that many people are going with their parents money. The majority of people pay for college themselves or take out loans that they will be paying off down the line.
That's why I'm going to a cheap state school. Same piece of paper I could get at UGA or Mercer for about $10,000 instead of $100,000.
Lucky for me, I ended up not caring what people say and became a history major. I could do this at just about any accredited school in the nation.
That's an interesting choice because of the classes involved, and employment-wise it can lead you to a few interesting places, too.Quote from: Azumarill on October 31, 2014, 11:28:49 AMLucky for me, I ended up not caring what people say and became a history major. I could do this at just about any accredited school in the nation.
become a librarian.
Quote from: Isara on October 31, 2014, 11:30:03 AMThat's an interesting choice because of the classes involved, and employment-wise it can lead you to a few interesting places, too.Quote from: Azumarill on October 31, 2014, 11:28:49 AMLucky for me, I ended up not caring what people say and became a history major. I could do this at just about any accredited school in the nation.It gives me a pretty diverse pool of classes to choose from. I want to get a media specialist/library science master's after finishing this bachelor's and become a librarian. I just want to live a simple, inoffensive, private existence keeping books.
That kind of thing is where it becomes a waste of money. Everything you described. It's over-saturated.
How dare you quote like that! Haha, what I mean is too many people are in college without a true understanding of what they want to do, and there's a lot of competition so now having a degree doesn't mean as much. It also doesn't help that it's expensive as hell.