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Degree planning for teen - Printable Version +- Online Degrees and CLEP and DSST Exam Prep Discussion (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb) +-- Forum: Main Category (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Forum-Main-Category) +--- Forum: Degree Planning Advice (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Forum-Degree-Planning-Advice) +--- Thread: Degree planning for teen (/Thread-Degree-planning-for-teen) Pages:
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RE: Degree planning for teen - ElderlyLeemur - 03-02-2025 (03-01-2025, 02:35 PM)jg_nuy Wrote: Any preference for major? Oh my gosh, I realize I did not reply to this. My apologies! We actually put in an application at ETAMU, but hadn't heard back. It did look like a fairly decent choice. Thanks! RE: Degree planning for teen - bjcheung77 - 03-02-2025 Pierpont BOG AAS wouldn't have been possible anyways, they would need to be 1 year out of high school graduation before you can apply. Anyways, is the student homeschooled or done with high school? If yes, then continue doing the ACE/NCCRS credits until you reach 90+ for transfer into COSC, Excelsior, TESU, etc If not a high school or homeschool grad, then go for dual enrollment, in addition to the ACE/NCCRS credits. Dual enrollment for classes that can't be done through ACE/NCCRS, for the GPA and RA requirements... RE: Degree planning for teen - ElderlyLeemur - 03-02-2025 (03-02-2025, 02:01 PM)bjcheung77 Wrote: Pierpont BOG AAS wouldn't have been possible anyways, they would need to be 1 year out of high school graduation before you can apply. Anyways, is the student homeschooled or done with high school? If yes, then continue doing the ACE/NCCRS credits until you reach 90+ for transfer into COSC, Excelsior, TESU, etc If not a high school or homeschool grad, then go for dual enrollment, in addition to the ACE/NCCRS credits. Dual enrollment for classes that can't be done through ACE/NCCRS, for the GPA and RA requirements... They were qualifed for Pierpont. We aren't doing DE. Thank you though! RE: Degree planning for teen - Duneranger - 03-02-2025 If I was 17 again I'd absolutely just got to a 4-year college and enjoy life. There is little to no advantage in rushing a degree at 17. No one will take them seriously regardless and there will be glaring questions on how he got a degree so fast. I can tell you as someone who finished a UMPI history/poli sci degree in one term, its not the same as a standard 4 year learning experience. It was scattered PDFs and a few YT videos for learning. I'd wager places like TESU are the same. How will that provide a solid foundation for future learning as a kid? Why not CC first then transfer? Cheap and reasonable. These speed run schools were always meant for adults for work/life experience... RE: Degree planning for teen - ElderlyLeemur - 03-02-2025 (03-02-2025, 10:45 PM)Duneranger Wrote: If I was 17 again I'd absolutely just got to a 4-year college and enjoy life.Welp, differences make the world go around. Thanks for your input. RE: Degree planning for teen - natshar - 03-03-2025 To echo what the other poster said. I agree that there is no need to rush when you are young. Over the years, I personally met multiple people who got their bachelors degree at 18/19/20, but it was a general degree. Then they went back for their actual degree for what they wanted to study. However, it screwed them over because 2nd degrees are not eliglbe for any scholarships. It also screws things up for internships. Honestly, the people I met who got their bachelors at 18 seemed no better off and if anything it seemed worse. But this is just one person opinion. You are right that everyone is different. As long as you know the risks of getting a degree young and your kid wants I see no problem with it. It's your life. You make whatever choice you want. However, just know that there are drawbacks of getting a degree at such a young age and just wanted you to be aware. RE: Degree planning for teen - ElderlyLeemur - 03-03-2025 (Yesterday, 06:11 PM)natshar Wrote: To echo what the other poster said. I agree that there is no need to rush when you are young. Over the years, I personally met multiple people who got their bachelors degree at 18/19/20, but it was a general degree. Then they went back for their actual degree for what they wanted to study. However, it screwed them over because 2nd degrees are not eliglbe for any scholarships. It also screws things up for internships. Honestly, the people I met who got their bachelors at 18 seemed no better off and if anything it seemed worse. But this is just one person opinion. Again, I appreciate the input but we are pretty set on the path and we have a myriad reasons as to why this is the best path for this person. I understand everyone has an opinion, but I would sincerely appreciate no further advice regarding waiting as it is simply not something we are considering. Please understand with absolutely all due respect that I know this person better than anyone else posting here and this is the path that is best. Thanks. |