Quote:
Originally Posted by JesseQuinn
that's the thing though, I work with a ton of peeps online I have never met (and I'm lucky for the few I have during my travels) and have made some real friends, learned and I hope shared real knowledge about the world and our purview(s).
for a 25 year old in a dead end job with no family support (not me, just positing here) is online not miles ahead of working in a gas station for the rest of his or her life?
we need to make online ed a valid option, otherwise to me at least it's just more ivory tower bullshit.
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Don't get me wrong, I think online is a very valid option. I have a friend who started his degree right after high school then dropped out because he became a dad and had to make more money. Now, seven years later, he has three kids and a wife and he wants to finish his degree so he is doing it online and it works great for him.
I might have done it had it been an option for me. I grew up in a small town about an hour outside of Portland. If the option to live at home, keep the job I had, and go to school online was there, at the very least I would have given it a deep, long look.
I was just saying that the experience of going to college, especially if you are young and it is your first time living on your own, can be a great one. It didn't hurt that Portland in the early 1990's was a fantastic place to be. I had some amazing experiences outside of school and with my classmates that I will have memories of for the rest of my life.