2
I would not suggest a CC, go to school, meet friends, live away from home and have fun.
Check out some places you think you might like to live later on in live, maybe some SEC schools, who knows. Just get on a campus and enjoy your time, check out some Frats, see if its for you, check out the doorms.
Can it be exepensive? Sure, but its worth it. Now, if you are planning on going into Family and Consumer Science, Education, Social Work, stay away from the really expensive schools.
But I woudl tell you NOT to worry about the money part, college is an experience, you will probably meet your future best friends there, the same friends that you will be talking to, emailing and textings 20 years from now, you will possibly meet your wife, you will go back and visit the place a few times.
It will be worth it. Just be sure to work over the summers to have spending money!
I fundamentally disagree with every single thing that you put in your post. Probably the worst part that I hear constantly that is that 'college is an experience', so just do what feels good. It is reckless and ignorant to tell an 18 year old to do it cause it feels good not because it is what is logical. Everything is an experience.
You will probably meet your future best friends there and possibly meet your wife.??? I live 300 miles away from where I graduated from and rarely talk to anyone that I went to school with. I met my wife while she was attending another University. I don't know about probably, maybe, possibly or might, but you will definitely being paying for it long after you realize that employers don't care if you took 2 years of Gen Ed's at Metro before you finished at UNL or UNO. I'm sure your counter will be that your wife was your Chemistry Lab partner and the best man in your wedding use to hold your face out of the toilet in the dorm room so you wouldn't drown when you puked.
If I had to do it all over again, I would have gone to a school like Milford-SCC and learned a trade rather than my Nebraska-Degree that I really don't use. You enter the workforce a lot faster because you have real work skills and it is far easier to find a job. I do understand that that isn't for everybody.
I had no adult 'real world guidance' when I chose the university that I ended up attending. I made the choice based upon where I wanted to play football only. Looking back I can't believe how lucky I was because that was a really stupid decision.
I never took chem and I am not married. Maybe I should have taken Chem class!
College doesnt have to be expensive. Heck, you live in a house with 4 or 5 friends you pay 200 dollars a month for your rent/bills. I am not sure about undgrad tution anymore but I just took a couple more Masters classes this summer, through UNK and for two classes (6 hours) it was 1500 dollars. So, undergrad would be a bit cheaper. 184 a credit hour at UNK (I imagine UNL is the same or close to it) so 15 credits will run you 3,000 dollars, toss in books, we can say about 3,500 give or take a bit.
So now you are looking at 200 month for rent/bills, 3,500 a semester for 15 credit hours (you can always take 12 and then take a few classes over the summer at SCC or Metro to save cash). Food/booze, thats tough, if he lives in Omaha and is at UNL then my guess is he gets away with coming home to get food and 20 dollars here and there so he can probably live on about 150 a month for all food and booze. Okay, so lets see.
3,500 (per semester if taking 15 hours) 7,000 total
2,000 (if you can get a off camups house with friends and you pay about 200 a month, doable, trust me)
150 (a month food/booze) we will round up to 1,400
10,400 dollars for a year of school. That is not that expensive.
Now, lets assume again that this kid WORKS full time over the summer, 10-12 weeks of full time work, say about 8 dollars an hour. 3,200, take out taxes, 2,400 dollars (give or take)He just paid for 20% of his first year. WOW, thats really good.
Now, lets say he works a bit during the school year, maybe 15 hours a week. So after taxes he is making 100 dollars a week (maybe he waites tables or bartends, tax free baby, shhhhh, dont tell the IRS) so now we are looking at 400 a month, during the school year. Lets be nice and say that counts as September - April (I will do you a solid and not even count Xmas, lets give him the entire month of December off) so 7 months at 400 a month. 2,800 (roughly, maybe he misses a few days cause he is sick or maybe he gets more cash for Xmas and uses that, who knows.
So our 10,400 that we started with was down to 7,000 from his summer work and with his "during school work" it is down to 5,200, lets be really safe and say its closer to 6,000.
Now, after having a full time job (real work experience, possibly something he can use later, maybe something that he will end up majoring in) and then being a responsible kid and working during the school year (I did it, Tom Olsen Lawn Care, Lincoln Nebraska, I BUSTED MY a$$ mowing lawns for that man) so he is alreayd down to 6,000!
This kid has not only had a great college experience but he also worked full time over the summer and 20 hours a week while in school! Lets not forget, this is taking 15 credits each semester, not 12 and 12 or 12 and 15 or 15 and 12. So it could be a bit less!
So now, we have this, what did you call it, "reckles and ignorant" advice given to this 18 year old kid, who has paid for over HALF his first year of school, was away from home, growing up, being responsible with a full time and part time job, learning in the class and meeting new friends.
Dont even get me started if he is working right now, cause, well, thats even more money that he will have to use!
I did it, not long ago, I did again for my Masters. It is very doable. If you want to do it.
Is it for everyone? No, its not, but its doable and can be done cheaply.
I do agree with what you said about possible employers not really caring about your gen eds, thats true. Unless you went to a top 10 school, no one really cares to much.
I hope you dont think I am trying to be a D-bag when I reply to your post, I was just trying to explain my side of it. I do agree with you that lots of kids should check out CC first, it just seems like this kid was talking about a U. Also, why was your choice lucky? You sound like you hated college.
I talk to my college friends all the time. I have been out of undergrade for 13 years or so