Going To College

Words: 1144
Pages: 5

While in school many children begin questioning “why do I have to go to school for eight hours a day, five days a week?” I know as a child I asked myself this question once a week, as did my friends. The older I got the more I began to realize just how important my education was especially when it came to the career choice I chose. After countless meetings with my high school advisor I chose what I what I wanted to do with my life and that was to be a nurse, because I want to be able to help and care for those in need. As high school began coming to an end I started to notice that many peers I was graduating with, did not chose to go to college and instead decided to go straight into the work force. At first I was baffled that anyone would …show more content…
The option of attending a technical school or an eighteen-month program will give you just as much knowledge as you need for the career path you choose. Being a part of this type of program will let you graduate, experience the real world, and find a job much sooner than someone going to a university. Liz Addison states that “The community college system is America’s hidden public service gem” (Addison 257). I personally agree with Addison for many different reasons, the ideal part being that while in an eighteen-month program you will only have to learn and study subjects and skills needed to complete your degree, experiencing more hands on learning, while saving thousands of dollars. There are a handful of peers that I graduated with that have already graduated or passed their technical programs and have jobs of their own. At times I envy these people watching them develop their own lives as adults, while I am stuck living at home with parents and spending up to six hours a day in classrooms writing notes and listening to lectures. If I could have gone to technical school for the degree, I wanted I would have. Although the thought of experiencing the real, adult world sooner is tempting I also believe that having four years of schooling is absolutely needed before I go out and begin giving patients shots, IVS, and medication, but I do not think that a four-year college is needed for other career choices like being an electrician or a construction worker. These jobs do require training, but once they have received that training in a more laid back, relaxed, less stressful atmosphere they are more than capable of beginning their