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2006-11-22 13:25:13 · 3 answers · asked by eightynine 1 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

I need HELP, I have one shot at an education, GUIDE me!!

2006-11-22 13:26:29 · update #1

3 answers

I have mixed feelings about this question. On one hand, of course it matters where you go to school --if you can get into one of the 40 or so top U.S. universities. These places--e.g. Harvard, Princeton, Brown, Stanford, Duke--have lots of resources. They have big libraries, great faculties, and top students go to these schools. It is not a coincidence that Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, John F. Kennedy, FDR (not to mention Bill Gates) and a lot of the people who work for them all went to Ivy League schools either as an undergraduate or a gradaute.

On the other hand, any college of even modest reputation can point out very successful people who went to that school. Some people say that you can go to any decent college, do well and then go to an elite school for a graduate or professional degree. Whatever you decide, good luck.

2006-11-22 13:45:45 · answer #1 · answered by Ace Librarian 7 · 1 0

It concerns reckoning on what field of work you pick to enter. of direction, once you're employing to a corporation agency you'd be desiring some kind of corporation degree. There are some circumstances the position having a particular substantial degree can help you come across jobs in diverse fields of work (having a promoting degree permits you to artwork in both corporation or Communications) yet for the most section you'd be desiring to have a level for a substantial appropriate to the interest you pick. you does no longer save on with for an accounting position with a movie substantial, would you?

2016-11-29 09:29:09 · answer #2 · answered by kuebler 4 · 0 0

It matters where you get your college degree from, but for most of the population, that fades with time...ie once you're out in the workplace and have the chance to distinguish yourself with your work, it's less important.

For some elite positions in business, journalism and government, that prestige of your alma mater is with you for a longer time.

There's no one answer to your question about a major. It depends what YOU want to do, what YOU want to study, what careers/jobs YOU want to pursue. I suggest you speak with your college counselor (if you're in high school) about this, and/or go online and do some research about tests you can take that give you an idea of the types of fields you're best suited for. Maybe that will give you a lead...

2006-11-22 13:41:07 · answer #3 · answered by Shars 5 · 1 0

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