Colleges dont really matter. Well, specific ones. THere's nothing to seperate you from a person who went for a two year associates school, someone who went to a community college, or another person who went to a four year college. I mean, yeah, the names are nice, but thats not something someone really looks for unless they went to the same college.Annoying Turd said:Greetings, and thanks for reading.
I'm planning on entering a 4 year uni program that earns me a bachelor's degree in foo.
However, I can't put my finger down on the perfect major, or even on my future career.
Now, here's my issue: I'm no expert in anything; I can't even flip burgers or mop floors, let alone perform cosmetic surgery or design perfect websites/software/graphics or art, engineer the most brilliant machines/electronics, or tackle the latest theorems in mathematics that would lead to minor breakthroughs in biochemistry. I can't even write well. I have no passion in anything, not even in video games like everyone else in this forum.
So, how do I fit in the world? I hope I don't end up careerless or unemployed.
PS. Should I go for a cheap school that gives me a great education including research/internship oppurtinties and a full scholarship, or a big brand name ivory tower expensive university populated with Nobel laureates?
Secondly, you shouldnt ask what career to go into, i tshould be something you like. Now, if you're looking for something easy, accounting or something business-ie (management like) are good careers because you only need basic accounting skills (not really even that), anda decent personality. But you also need to be ready for long-ish work hours. BUt both are also standard four year degrees that are easy to do in practice that most any college offers. And each has a lot of scholarships available as you get up further in them.