Why College Students Should Not Go To College

Words: 1434
Pages: 6

I pad across the carpeted floor, reluctantly pulling out a maroon chair beside one of my friends. I am greeted with an unenthused look from the black computer screen, and the teacher’s monotonous tone rings out as he recites our instructions. Sitting here, inside this emotional prison, in front of this technological prison, which is also inside of this creative prison, I am trapped by my own mentality and decisions. Forced to click through hundreds of questions which by the end, their long numbered chains of code will be the alphabet which spells out your destiny. Slowly spilling out your guts into their information banks, organ donor or not. In the end, their computer system claims that it’s read you well enough to know exactly where you …show more content…
This feeling of entrapment is something that haunts many high school students, college students, and even adults who have to battle with the threatening idea of choosing their “permanent” career. Students should not have to firmly commit to a career from a young age because most students haven’t discovered the hobbies and activities they truly love doing, younger students are more susceptible to peer pressure, and once people reach college some people become burned out with their past ideas of the future. Students should not have to firmly commit to a career from a young age because most students haven’t discovered the hobbies and activities they truly love doing to the point they would spend the rest of their lives doing it, and be financially stable. For example, Martha Stewart was a full-time model until age 25, when she became a mother, and found fewer and fewer people hiring her. She then turned to a career as a stockbroker for over five years, and it wasn’t until after 30 that she became such a popular and famous chef. …show more content…
A clear example of this is Timothy Samuels. For all four years of his high school journey, Timothy has been in marching band, has taken music classes in school since 6th grade, as well as private lessons at home on the weekends. While music has always been his passion, and he’s wished to continue it throughout college and become a music teacher at his current high school, Monterosso High. Several colleges with amazing music programs are tossing all kinds of scholarships towards him, expressing how talented he is, and finally Timothy picks the one which offers the most money towards his tuition. Despite being eager to finish high school, he gets emotional at his school’s senior night for marching band, and says goodbye to his fellow classmates to start a new journey in his life. Although once he gets to college, he realizes that it is simply more of the same repetition that he has gone through the past six years of school, and wishes he had kept music as a hobby and tried out other career ideas. Matilda also shows why this is true, as she has helped out in her father’s automotive repair shop ever since the age of 4. Looking for a next-of-kin to take over the family business, her father wants her to follow in his footsteps, and she’s eager to take over the business after she finishes school. Beginning her