I finished engineering at 20, but there isnt any young or old in learning. Its a continuous process.
2006-10-02 15:38:26
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answer #1
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answered by The young Merlin 4
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no your not, 22 is still young but not that young. Typically anymore the average age of a college freshman is 18-19 yrs old. I was 17 when I started my freshman year in college, I turned 17 my senior year of high school then started college in the fall.
So no your not too young, jump on it and get ahead, you don't want to be one of those unfortunate people that don't start college until late and by the time they graduate they are in there early 30's and by the time they find a career in their field they only have 30 yrs left to work before retirement, then you have to throw in the whole what about having a family factor, so you will miss more work and anymore employers are looking for younger people with degrees. They dont want to hire an older person just to have to pay out the retirement 15 yrs later, they want all they can get from you before retirement.
Go to college, graduate and get you a job!
2006-10-02 16:05:12
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answer #2
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answered by carebearashee 4
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It can make sense to start at 18 when you finish high school, so 22 is still reasonable.
I started when I was around 30. It is never too old. There have been people who went to college after they retired.
Most people think only of a new career after college. But, there are plenty of personal valid reasons to get a college degree, even in your 70's.
2006-10-02 15:34:10
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answer #3
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answered by retiredslashescaped1 5
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No, not really. You're still 'young', but compared with the average college freshman (18), you're not 'young'.
I started college at 16. :/
2006-10-02 15:33:32
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answer #4
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answered by Michael 5
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