Random Thoughts IX (The first 8 were probably better)

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Granted, I'm comparing it to what my college experience was like, so this may not be true regarding Iowa State, but here are a few things off the top of my head (and I'll admit this is a generalization):
1.) The classes are going to probably be different.
2.) I think the student body will be very different (both in terms of demographics as well as those your age. I think among the students your age it will feel more like a fifth year of high school)
3.) You won't be in the dorms or rushing a fraternity. The dorms and living on campus are a major part of that initial college experience, and I think not having that will also make it feel more like high school.
4.) Culture. A place like DMACC is going to have a very different culture than Iowa State, and you can't really replicate that. Plus, even if you had friends who would be starting Iowa State at the same time and you hung out with them, there's still that divide and they will be experiencing things differently than you will. They are Iowa State students and can experience that culture in a way that you and I can't as outsiders.

I can only speak about it from the (for back of a better term) college student side as opposed to community college side, but Wooster and Orrville (a town nearby) each had a two year college. My experience was vastly different than theirs in terms of classes, students, living in dorms, and the general culture and I don't think you can say that our experiences were similar just because we were all college students.
1 no ****
2 don't really care too much about that
3 I've been in dorms multiple time. idk if I would want to live there for a year.
4 true but I'm still going to go to Iowa State
 
1 no ****
2 don't really care too much about that
3 I've been in dorms multiple time. idk if I would want to live there for a year.
4 true but I'm still going to go to Iowa State
Doesn't matter if you go there eventually, it'll still be a much different experience transferring in after 1-2 years. And I don't care whether you care about it or not. Your point was there's pretty much no difference, and I think you're lying to yourself if you actually believe that.
 
Fell asleep on the couch for 15 minutes at like 930 last night so I get up all sweet im going to bed early tonight. Proceeds to stay awake in bed unable to fall asleep until 145


I miss the high school days where I could wake up at 6 for early bird and then stay at school/practice until 6 and still not be tired until 10:30 and fall asleep seamlessly
 
Bud, I lived in Huxley for my last semester of college. If you want the college experience, you won't find it as exciting in Boone. You will learn to hate the drive also.
Meh 10 minutes there and back isn't bad.Plus I can always ride with roommates and other friends
 
Doesn't matter if you go there eventually, it'll still be a much different experience transferring in after 1-2 years. And I don't care whether you care about it or not. Your point was there's pretty much no difference, and I think you're lying to yourself if you actually believe that.
I guess we'll see next year
 
What the big deal is and why bother. But I grew up dirt poor and that seems more like a middle class tradition, so maybe it just wasn't ingrained in the culture?
When we were kids Christmas cards were a big thing. Every day we would get more cards and we would decorate the door jambs with them. Christmas cards everywhere. Mom and Dad would buy a stack of them and send them to everybody you knew as well as people from Dad's office.
Kind of like this all over the house.
December+028+cropped.jpg
 
I'm the ancient relic who loves Christmas cards.

They come from a time when people couldn't communicate instantly and constantly via email, text, phone, and social media. They represent a time when people separated by time and circumstance still tried to remember others during the holidays.

Having lost both parents, who seemed to always wind up with the belongings of other relatives, the cards my mother kept are a wealth a knowledge about our family history and the past in general. And I kept the letters she sent me, and sometimes pull them out and imagine the words in her voice. Just seeing her perfect handwriting makes me cry.

For me, cards and letters are a more permanent way of remembering people who are important to me. They survive computer crashes and dead phones. So I have made a more conscious effort to actually write my boys who are out of state. My husband likes to send them postcards from home. Assumed maybe they just tossed them, but my grad student son has a postcard from his dad up on a board in his office.:)
 
Why are we busting BDK's apple bag about actually going to college, regardless of if it's CC or not?
I went to college at a cc for a year. I had received a couple of scholarships and it was basically free. I felt like the teachers/professors did a pretty good job teaching most of the classes. Admittedly, I was mostly taking pretty advanced classes for the school and the class sizes were really small for most of these classes. The classes I took that were geared toward the general student body did still have quite a bit of a high school feel to them but were still taught pretty well. However, the experience was extremely different. We still did similar things but to meet people you had to do it through class. There wasn't the dorm or fraternity environment that immersed you in new people and I ended up, mostly, just hanging out with people I knew from high school and looking forward to visiting my friends that went to schools that were out of town.
 
My only problem with the community college route is I don't think it fits every major. Know a kid who was sold on the saving money part, so he spent two years at community college and then went to ISU for mechanical engineering and it took him three and a half years at ISU. Really didn't get much done towards his degree at community college other than electives, so not sure he really saved any money and it may have cost him more.
 
My only problem with the community college route is I don't think it fits every major. Know a kid who was sold on the saving money part, so he spent two years at community college and then went to ISU for mechanical engineering and it took him three and a half years at ISU. Really didn't get much done towards his degree at community college other than electives, so not sure he really saved any money and it may have cost him more.
I agree with this.
 
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My only problem with the community college route is I don't think it fits every major. Know a kid who was sold on the saving money part, so he spent two years at community college and then went to ISU for mechanical engineering and it took him three and a half years at ISU. Really didn't get much done towards his degree at community college other than electives, so not sure he really saved any money and it may have cost him more.

This is why you need to make sure you have your ducks in a row or be in a transfer program where everything or pretty much everything transfers. Otherwise it can be wasted time and money. Thankfully I think there are a growing number of programs like this and it is not just with CCs. Back when we were in Wichita Emporia State and Wichita State came to an agreement for AERO E students to start at ESU and finish the last two years at WSU.
 
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This is why you need to make sure you have your ducks in a row or be in a transfer program where everything or pretty much everything transfers. Otherwise it can be wasted time and money. Thankfully I think there are a growing number of programs like this and it is not just with CCs. Back when we were in Wichita Emporia State and Wichita State came to an agreement for AERO E students to start at ESU and finish the last two years at WSU.

I think the only way that really works is that your community colleges have to be able to teach your basic engineering core courses well. Not sure that is really the case in Iowa. They are always trying to get my brothers, who are retired high school math teachers, to teach at the community colleges and they both only have Bachelor's degrees.

You can save money by bulking up on dual enrollment and AP classes in high school. All of my kids are doing that. If I remember right, I think maybe they got to keep their dual enrollment class grades as well (these are classes where they got both high school and community college credit because the teacher in their high school had a masters and could teach the community college class in the high school). On AP classes, I think they got credit but did not get to have the grade in their GPA.

A lot of kids will go to ISU and go ahead and take the class they passed the AP test on, just to get an easy grade and wreck the curve. Son said he saw a lot of that in things like Calc III. My kids have just elected to move on to the next class and not retake something they took in high school.
 
Ran into this quote while organizing my notes. This one was getting a book started:

""No one loved her, and she loved no one......She was eight years old, and all alone in the world."

This little girl has the honor of watching her little kitten boiled to death in front of her later in the book. Thankfully, someone gets her out of this unwanted and abusive home and things turn around.

Every once in a while, I forget how dark my stuff is. Then I look at it and wonder how I could forget.
 
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