yeah...I guess its jsut the norm to joek abotu thease things but I see where your coming fromMcface said:So you make fun of people for not having the money or grades to get into a better school?
haha oh escapist forums..
everyone gets all up in arms and whines and bitches when someone is bullied in school, then turns around and calls people idiots for going to a "lesser" college.
massive hypocrites you guys are.
This.RedEyesBlackGamer said:Our local community college, which I'm attending. People laugh, but I get to go to school for two years for free and then transfer. I could have gotten into a better college (ACT of 26 and a GPA of 3.3. It could've been higher but I procrastinated.), but why bother?SimuLord said:When I was in high school in beautiful Wakefield, Massachusetts, the shining jewel of loveliness by the lake, there was a hierarchy of colleges by which students who got into them would be ranked in the eyes of their fellow teenaged suburban spoiled so-and-sos. My graduating class (1995) sent 88% of our students directly to college that fall, and most of the rest of us (myself included) eventually went on to at least an associate's degree if not more later in life. So college was kind of a big deal.
And of course we had the Ivy League smart kids (we sent seven to Harvard and 16 more to other Ivies out of a graduating class of 235), the kids who went to the good tech schools (MIT, Worcester Poly, I think one even went all the way to CalTech), the good but not Ivy League schools (Boston College, Boston University, Colgate, Carnegie-Mellon, and other really good schools)...
And then there were the "safety school" kids, the ones who didn't get into the good colleges and ended up going to school wherever they could get in with practically open enrollment. Which in Massachusetts at least meant UMass Amherst and UMass Lowell. And of course, throughout the rest of senior year, there was good-natured ribbing like "ha ha, you're going to Dumbass Amherst. Should've showed up sober for the SAT, huh?"
For Discussion! So where's the school that your high school class pokes fun at or that you yourself may have put in as the "safety school" application so you could at least get a college education even if you couldn't get into a more prestigious college? And what state/province/commune/farshimmelt potrzebie are you from in your country?
The "almighty" Oscar Smith.Rocket Dog said:Chesapeake Virginia? If so, which high school are you talking about?Riccan said:Nah, Chesapeake. It's not so much the place, but the pathetic individuals that dwell within.
That's what I mean a little bit of. Out of high school, going to community college wither means that you sucked, or you're not in the healthiest economic situation. My mom went to Northern Essex a few years back to score a job as a RPSGT, since there's now two kids in college.SimuLord said:There are plenty of good reasons to go to community college. Most of them have to do with either economic circumstances or some sort of personal-redemption story.Eumersian said:I've only heard it called ZooMass?SimuLord said:"ha ha, you're going to Dumbass Amherst.
OT: BHCC, Salem State, the works. Nobody makes fun of the UMasses as far as I know. We all know that most people get in, but many people go there actually end up pretty good, or at least OK. Sure, I've heard them called "schools for lazy people" (it was the only school my brother applied to, and because of his grades, he's lucky he got in as far as I can tell) and places where you go because you don't want to work hard until you really know what you want to do. But I've never heard any smack about the UMasses.
Now BHCC, that was like the plague. Avoid it.
As in I went to Truckee Meadows Community College at age 31 in order to get the education I was too young and immature to get when I was 18. Transferred to Nevada-Reno, finishing my bachelor's in 2012, then possibly going to grad school for a master's degree. None of that would've been possible without the open enrollment.
Which in turn says something about community college---if you see an adult there (a real adult, not the overgrown children that the Millennial Generation turns out of their high school classes), chances are he or she is there to work hard, bust ass, and make something of themselves (with maybe a little bit of "I'll show you young bucks what's what" in there...) If you see a kid (as in 18-21) in community college, they were probably a teenage fuckup and they're probably going to be a slacker in school as well. Whereas now that I'm at "the big boy college" (as my friend Jasper calls the four-year school), age matters a lot less, especially at the junior/senior 300-400 level classes where the chaff's already been filtered out in those first two years. Doesn't matter if it's me at 33 or some other student at 21-22, the classes are much more equalized.
Well, I grew up a MSU fan, but came to U of M for their math program and just sort of got into all of that after coming here. Anyway, the hardcore fan/elitist douche thing is fun, that's why we do it. Sports are more interesting if you can manufacture some emotional investment in their outcome. Anyway, getting into a better school seems to be a reasonable excuse for some good natured ribbing. Most of the fan smack-talk isn't as asinine as it seems to an outside observer, just like Kirk vs. Picard debates are probably less silly than they seem to non-Trekkies, because you mostly remember the worst of it.Gxas said:Honestly, I despise both your school and OSU. Both had hardcore fans in my high school. I still stand by my, "You don't attend the school so why the fuck do you care?" statement. Maybe college sports are just over my head.
We're not talking about the people. We're talking about the colleges. We're talking about what funny stereotypes your area has for certain schools....and it appears that our two high-school's senior bodies could not be anymore different. Most of the people I know can't wait to get out of High school.Vykrel said:im a high school senior at the moment.
the majority of kids at my school arent assholes and dont tease people for not getting into a good college, since it is one of life's biggest disappointments for people just leaving highschool.