bad allies.
btw in grade 8 would you know how to spell 12th? I did and got 20/20 on my spelling quiz ^_^ (azn brofist)
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Eh, collage courses make me feel O_o.
Ah well, keep in mind, I'm a Sophomore.
French I
P.E.
Ag I
Biology
Civics/Free Enterprise
Geometry
English II
Back to uni this year after taking a break last year. Looking foward to it, but not the timetable - its horrible! Trying to compromise, stupid living 2 hours form the campus!
AFC2000: Financial institutions and markets
AFC2140: Corporate finance
ECC2000: Intermediate microeconomics
ECC2410: Introductory econometrics
I graduated my bachelors and have had to deal with the real world for a year. It's scary. :(
Taking a break at the moment. This fall I will start school again and study whateverthesmurf so people will stop giving me :bou::bou::bou::bou: about not being in school :|
It's important because it's important. Nobody respects you if you have no education beyond high school. I don't have anything against school, I just want to have a goal more specific than "get a degree in anything at all." School is expensive! I don't want to go there just to dilly dally!
- Fluid Biomechanics
- Multi-fluid mechanics
- New development in Fluorescent microscopy
- Microscopic measurements
- Biosensors
- Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and introduction to MRI
- Neurological MRI
- Vascular biology
- Numerical Analysis of continua
- Radio-isotopes and ionic radiation
- Electromechanics III - Advanced Electrodynamics
That together with an internship. It'll be a full semester, I guess.
What kind of degree do you get if you want to be a chef? Or a woodsworker? Your reply isn't what she needs-- you've spent so long participating in and worshipping academia, I doubt you remember what the outside world is like anymore :)
A degree in the culinary arts would help get you a high-profile job easier than it would hinder it. Being taken seriously without one would be difficult, though not impossible.Quote:
What kind of degree do you get if you want to be a chef?
I think that people underrate the perks, both emotionally and even financially, of being skilled in a trade. Besides the obviously example of skilled plumbers make 6 digits, I have a really good friend who is already making a very decent living of crafting and such, and she's only 21. While it's true that having a degree helps to be taken seriously, it's not what gives one the skills they need. Those come from the hands-on.
Also, :up: rubah.