If I Go to a community college will that eventually get me to a good University?
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I’m currently in a master’s program for psychology/art therapy and I thought I might be able to help you out with your question. It’s a really common one. I think most people think “good college = good university” but what it all boils down to is 1.) what you want to do and 2.) what real life experience you’ve created for yourself to learn everything about your area of interest. In your case, I would suggest: go to the community college, the best one in your area, and start volunteer work as soon as you can. Volunteer work is wonderful on a resume because it shows that you’ll do the work without the incentive of financial gain, and that means the world to admissions officers and prospective employers. More importantly, it’s the fastest way to connect with like-minded people who can hook you up with greater, more lucrative opportunities. Plus it’s good for you : ) I can’t stress enough: Get Involved! In any way that you can! Schools, whether community or ivies, LOVE students who take the initiative. That’s the key.
Try not to stress about what you don’t want or what you didn’t do – think about how your life has unfolded in a way that has led you up to this point. What have you learned so far in your life? What matters to you? What gets you “fired up?” What do you talk about the most? What books/movies/conversations attract your attention? All these are clues to what you want to do, and knowing THAT will lead you to the right school. Your perspective is valuable and unique, and there’s a ton of work and opportunity to get you to where you want to be.
Don’t get caught up in “Is this U good, is that U good” because the answer will always be “it depends what you want to do.” Try communicating with people in forums (google / yahoo are good ones) who share an interest in the field you want to go into. If you don’t know what you want to do, even better – you have the world open. Volunteer for something you’ve always wanted to do, keep your sense of humor and have fun! You’ll be ten times more successful when you follow yourself and your heart, not the ratings. I’m in a school that most people have never heard of, but the academic opportunities here are much greater here, and finding finances/security has never been a problem. It would have been much different if I’d “followed the beaten path.” Just something to think about.
Good luck!!!
Also depending what it is you want to do with your life depends what college you should apply to, don’t apply to a college that specializes in engineering, when you want to be the CEO for a business, get my drift?