But does your school do a tribute to silent hill 3 every semester??

but does your school do a tribute to silent hill 3 every semester??

Bonjour fellow Texas Tech student. History graduate student master race right here.

...

27yo engineering undergrad reporting in

>27 year old undergrad

How do people stay in college for so long? I'm 25 and about to get my master's. Did you start college late?

Or is engineering that hard?

No

They just cry about Columbus day and bitch and moan when a conservative comes on campus

>school

i have a job

nigga you need to go to school to get a decent job. Even if you're doing a trade, you still need some school.

>Only a part time student
>Taking breaks between years to intern/work
And maybe starting late. It's not that surprising, man.

yeah im done school

lol why criticize people for going to school if you did the same thing?

Cool, you gonna give me a mil to go to school?

>bitch and moan when a conservative comes on campus

You mean they don't make threats of violence, break windows, and demand mental health counseling when a conservative comes to campus?

Your campus is really red-pilled.

what?

>Take out a loan, get a government job
>have loan forgiven.
>Get a higher paying private job.

Anyways the loans are worth it in the long run because of the extra money you're going to make anyways. Simple econ dude

Shadilay fellow magapede

>if you go to college you instantly get a job
Not how it works m8. Majority of bankruptcies in the US are due to student loans.

If you go for an engineering job, a trade, or to become a public school teacher, jobs are pretty easy to get dude.

>implying

>I'm 25 and about to get my master's.
Are you a fucking dunce? How do you not have SEVERAL PhDs by now?

Did your parents pay for school?

That's bullshit, because student loans are rarely discharged at bankruptcy.

N-no

I went to Tech for 3 years, worst 3 years of my life cause Lubbock fucking sucks

Now I'm just finishing my degree online, but eventually I'm going to have to go back

Nah I'm taking out loans and becoming a public school teacher. Like I was saying government employees get their loans forgiven. I have a license to teach French, English, and Social Studies so finding a job isn't that hard (finding a French teaching job is stupidly easy because nobody teaches it.)

You can't write student loans off on a bankruptcy. They stick with you until you pay them (or the statue to collect runs out and it just destroys your credit forever).

Lubbock is pretty cool now, well I think it is. It's cozy and has an Alamo Drafthouse, which is all I need desu. We're also about to get an In-n-Out so that's cool.

But then again I come from a third world country (Superpower by 2020) so anything in America is pretty good

What's it like getting a history degree? What jobs were you aspiring for and how hard is it to acquire the degree? (At least your university).

I love it. History is my favorite thing in the world and talking about history is also my favorite thing. I want already have a license to teach history so I'm all set, I'm just getting the master's so that I can get move up a paygrade. It's not even remotely hard, as long as you like reading and writing. You have to be really into it, teaching is really the only thing you can do with it with a BA or MA desu. If you get a PhD you can do more stuff, like consulting for movies, or writing books that will be respected.

*I already have

didnt start til 24. college gets cheap when you turn 24. public schools dont see you as an independent until you are 24 or are married or have a kid

Do you at all plan to go after your PhD, and if so would you recommend it? I am exiting HS soon, and plan to attend a rather nice uni, so I'm curious if it's worth the extra effort and time.

Sup Forums is 18+ only kiddo.

Not anytime soon. I just to teach in the middle of nowhere in Maine or Alaska (because they never have people filling positions, and it's cold and comfy). If I decide to do Alaska they'll give me a basic income on top of the income I'll get for a teacher plus a faster timeline for loan forgiveness, but it's really hard to live in the tundra and their retention rate is awful (because it's really hard to live in the tundra)

>Turn 24 this upcoming November
>Have been going to a community college on/off since graduating highschool
>Finally transferring to a '4 year' university next fall
>Apply for financial aid earlier this year
>The powers at be no longer ask for parent's tax information
>The see me as someone who makes literally no money at all and must live on the street
Guess I don't ever have to worry about any sort of income cap for financial aid.
Though I do know you can only get certain grants for so many semesters but whatever.

>Taking out loans to become a teacher
As a high school teacher, I can tell you that you are silly taking on debt for a profession that only has loan forgiveness in the shittiest areas. I enjoy teaching, though.

Was born in '99.

>Need to goto college
Im a systems engineer and I have no degree, pure selftaught with certs

Your field happens to (mostly) be meritocratic in nature. You can show a finished product and thus be desirable for it. Other professions that are more service in nature tend to rely on shitty qualification systems that do not directly prove competence at the task. Trade schools/certs are closer to directly testing what you'll be doing on the job.

Don't plan on going to masters or phd directly after college, without work experience in your field you still won't be able to find a job after masters if you're doing liberal arts
>tfw have degrees in polisci and international relations but now work as a data analyst

are you retarded?