If you have four years to complete your college education, do it.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
In college, you learn how to learn. Four years is not too much time to spend at that.
I went to college for four years.
Colleges do not merely offer preparation for the future; they occupy four years of a student's life, and an institution should do what it can to make these years absorbing and enjoyable.
But you take a four-year state college, with a broader range of admission, and what happens during those four years may be an even greater value-added educational experience. I don't know.
The obsessive focus on a college degree has served neither taxpayers nor students well. Only 35 percent of students starting a four-year degree program will graduate within four years, and less than 60 percent will graduate within six years. Students who haven't graduated within six years probably never will.
College was the greatest four years of my life.
I haven't gone to college yet and I intend to in a few years.
Each year, I say I'm going to go to school next year. It's inevitable that I'll end up getting my education.
Employers have decided that having the breadth of knowledge that's associated with a four-year degree is often something they want to see in the people they give that job to.
You don't need a four-year college degree if you have burning ambition or a great plan.