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I Would Love To Study A Bachelor Degree In Science Excelled Very Well Indeed Who Would Be Kind

If you are a computer science student, how do you plan your career after graduation? How do you search for jobs or internships? What kind of skills are you learning or want to learn? What advice do you have for other students?

For Degree Diggers~~Truley said nothing much total waste of time and money tooo.For Interested Students~ Way of Rich life.At first I tell about Interested and Hardcore Students Who wants to become computer engineer~Ethical hacking {Best choice}Computer programmer{Not for {Relationship accepted} type boys.Multimedia/ Animation /Game developers {Those who wants to make carrer in Film industry}Railway It Department {Government job with high salary}Those students who wants to do interested in above 3 carrer lines must try in above 3 lines.Slapped Answer For Degree Diggers~Dear Degree Diggers,Those students who did graduation only for Degree and Tries to show himself a computer Master to his friends and family and passed a examination from cheating and others are called Degree Diggers.Sorry for This answer~ Why degree Diggers wasted his father money for only to show off?I ruined my 4 years of Computer graduation after I got government job a post of LDC in school.Iam also a degree Digger because I Don't had interested in computer science.I only do it for show off to my friends{sadly to say}And after all I got Government job in 10+2 field.My father is angry on me now Because My father wants to see me a computer engineer. I also ruined my father worth rs 2,500,000.And after I got it I ruined my father Dream. I am working now in Government school as a post of LDC salary rs 18000/~ Month I advises to you to Degree Diggers pleaseDon't ruin your carrer to get another carrer Path.Choose right path after 12th and best streamDecide your dream job after 12th.Don't be degree Diggers.That is total waste if time and money..

College is making me feel depressed?

I have had to do something twice to succeed. I saw your question, and I intended to answer it later. Then, I forgot the query title of your question, and I had to go back to look at the list to find it.

Doing things twice to succeed is an imminent part of life, sometimes.

I agree with some very thoughtful advice given here. I'm just going to say that it seems that you're a smart student and it is probably not your ability which is hindering you, but your method. If someone's smart, then they're smart. Plain and simple. But sometimes, we make mistakes about HOW to study than actually doing the studying itself.

Heck, I look at you more favourably because you are doing well in your English and Humanities courses. Those courses usually require creative, critical thinking. Anatomy and Physiology require brute memorization, as someone pointed out to you earlier. I value critical, intellectual thinking over brute memorization. To me, if you can think critically, you'll find a way out of this predicament.

Everyone needs help. I would talk to a counsellor, as someone duly pointed out here. It isn't something to be ashamed of, indeed. How many people go through life without getting the adequate help they require? Now, that's just asinine. First, rectify your study methods. Then, your self-confidence and hopelessness. I think that once you get back on track with your studies, you'll feel much better.

Good thing is that you're in Sophomore year. You've got two years to go after this, and usually the 3rd and 4th year is considered to be the most important. Many employers skim transcripts from the "bottom-up", because they want to see how you've been doing recently. A 4.0 average in first year is nothing if you only succeed to get a 2.0 in final year. I'd rather take a student who got a 4.0 in his/her final two years, and maybe did badly in his/her first two years, than someone with say, a 3.5 cumulative GPA throughout (uniformly distributed).

So, in short, there is hope.

Want more hope? My management professor claimed he failed like three quarters of his first year courses. And not just marginal fails, but ABYSMAL fails. And, he became my professor, and after he finished his undergrad, he earned an MBA and an MSc. at very competitive universities.

Good luck. You know what you have to do. Now, get cracking!

I think I lost my talent in drawing? Can it return somehow?

I'm 16. Okay, so all my life I use to draw draw draw. Since pre-K my teachers always told my parents how I was creative and drew way better than the typical 3 year old's scribbles on paper. Drawing use to make me feel more calm and I was always great at it, it's a God given talent. I have multiple excelling in art diplomas and a whole long story of all these accomplishments in art; but I'm not going to say them all here since it's not really necessary.

But now I've been feeling really depressed and stressed (taking anti-depressants and been to therapy) I always drew the best when I was inspired. Today I couldn't even draw a portrait of a celebrity which always comes out pretty accurate to me, I get all frustrated and rip it up. I feel like a failure...

I mean, I don't know if these factors contribute to this? When I draw now, I feel like I can't concentrate and only focus on making it look like the person—before it came naturally.

PLEASE HELP! This is the only thing I'm good at, I'm a failure at everything else and yes, I do indeed, have extremely low self-esteem. But in art, not so much (even though I do pressure myself hard that it will never be good enough but I enjoy the outcome and satisfaction of drawing).

What are some good jobs for people without college degrees?

That’s a topic that will never run dry. Let me ask you another question though. What is the best job for someone who does have a college degree?The answer is the same for both questions - there is no ‘best’ job. Actually, in most cases, you can end up doing the same job as someone with a degree. Of course, we aren’t talking about doctors, lawyers, natural sciences professionals, and other professions that require years of serious dedication in order to master that particular skill set.Everything else, including software development, design, project management, writing, photographing, business development, and like 90% of other jobs, require ONLY your willingness to continually invest in your knowledge and persistence to push forward no matter what. College degree in those cases doesn’t really mean anything if you can’t back it up with your knowledge.I helped hundreds of professionals move up on a career ladder, and there were plenty of those in executive level roles that dropped out of college simply due to opportunity cost.Reason?They were moving more quickly in building their knowledge and skill sets on their own than they were receiving from college programs.We live in a gig economy these days, and most people are having a hard time realizing that fact. Universities are still preparing their students for full-time jobs when they graduate, and since it’s only natural to trust that kind of authority, students are unknowingly becoming prepared to live in a society that is ceasing to exist. Once their college days end, so it will their comfort zone.Unlike those students, you can adapt to the situation more quickly and start working in line with latest industry trends. There’s a plethora of free courses on Coursera, edX and other similar platforms. At least in the 21th century, the knowledge is truly free and available to anyone, so there are no excuses not to learn and grow in whatever you love doing.Don’t be afraid to pursue your goals, and don’t let anyone put you down only because you chose a different road for yourself. I did it as well, and I have no regrets whatsoever.

Need Help!!!?

k,my frend hates dis 1 person bcuz he had a dream about him.unfortunetly i forgot he told me not 2 tell.i was about 2 tell da person he dreamt about.next thing u know,he cums up 2 me and pulls my hair so hard dat if he pulled it a little bit harder my hair would rip off.do u think i deserved wat i got?

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