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What Is Your College Major Or If You Are In High School Or Junior High What Do You Want To Study

Junior college or UC school after high school?

Hi,

I would personally go to UC. A tougher curriculum keeps you challenged, and makes sure you don't lose motivation. Plus you'll be surrounded by peers who feel the same way. Also, i think UC will look better on a med school application - although i'm not sure. hope someone else on the forum can answer that!

If your only criteria is the grades & how tough the classes will be, ask yourself this : Do you believe that you are capable of keeping up with challenging courses and scoring well?

You wouldn't want to be overwhelmed, but you also don't want to enter a system that's too easy for you. Not saying colleges are easy, but as ur saying there's less competition than UC. So you might be satisfied with certain grades. While at UC you'll get a much broader view of what your competition will look like in the real world.

This is my personal opinion, but of course it's your decision. You seem like a bright student, 4.14 is quite impressive. Good luck!

Answer mine pls :)
http://ca.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20140103170036AAq3uTB

I'm a junior in high school and i want to go to college to become a vet..any advice?

Study chemistry, biology, and physiology. You might start by learning and understanding the Krebs cycle, internal respiration, external respiration; you might learn the roles of hemoglobin and sodium bicarbonate in transporting oxygen in the blood.
You definitely need to understand respiratory alkalosis, respiratory acidosis, metabolic alkalosis, and metabolic acidosis. You should learn the role of the kidneys in regulating these conditions, and how they are caused and what treats them.
You should also start studying veterinary drugs and their effects, side effects, and contraindications. Study how they are dosed and why (for example, many drugs are dosed as x mg per kg of animal's body weight, so a 5kg dog would receive 5x mg per day).
Doing all of this now will make your college classes MUCH easier.

https://www.usnews.com/best-grad...But if you have any concerns over the cost of your education, several things to consider:Attend a public in-state university. Compare total costs (not just tuition) and see for yourself.Which schools have the best record of post-grad employment? The better schools have partnerships with firms who often recruit directly from campus.Take a look at the school’s (Registrar/Admissions web page) Financial Aid calculator. Use FAFSA (Google it)

Find a degree in international affairs, and work to become fluent in another language.Study the aspects of a region. Don’t take the easy route and learn Spanish. Learn European Spanish or Catalan if you want to go that route. Middle East: Arabic, Urdu, and others I cannot remember right now. Africa: Um…I’ll be honest with you, I have no idea. I know some countries utilize French, but many use English and local tribal languages. I told people in 2009 that Russian was still an important language and everyone told me I was a fool *shrug*.Point is, find a region of the world that you have a passion in, and do that. (If you’re somehow passionate in Canada, you need to know more about Canada than Canadian citizens do - I had a roommate who tried).Understand that being a full-on diplomat usually has more to do with campaign contributions than it does competency. If you’re a United States of America citizen, you want to talk to the State Department or US AID. If you can create a dialogue with someone working there, you’ll be ahead of the game.

I'm a Junior in High School.?

For learning French, seem up colleges that experience FLE (francais langue etrangere). For instance, in Nice there's the CUEFLE. It bills approximately $a thousand a semester. As a scholar, you'll get housing support too. For learning in France, there's the internet site campusfrance. If you research industry, there are systems that experience publications in English or English and French. For instance, the institution skema has a bachelor's measure in industry. If you do anything like this, you can traditionally uncover a well process. As a scholar, you'll be competent to paintings aspect-time. You can check out being an au pair for households.

What's the difference between high school and college?

You have a lot more freedom and independence in college. (Besides living away from home)
You have the option to choose from a much wider variety of classes.
There generally aren't attendance policies for classes, though this varies from professors to professors. Some don't care if you don't show up, some will find methods of checked attendance (random pop quizzes etc) throughout the semester.
As an upperclassmen during college, your classes are focused on your particular major.
Professors don't provide as much help as teachers do in high school. They don't help you every step of the way. It's solely up to to understand the material whether you study it on your own, or seek extra help.
The pace of a class is much faster during college. The amount of material you may cover during an entire year in high school is usually covered in a semester or less during college.

There are pros and cons of all the independence of college. While you have the freedom of doing what you want when you want, it also means that you are on your own. Professors don't care if you're failing a class. If you fail, you fail and that's it.

Currently a high school junior with no idea what to do with my life concerning college/career. HELP?!?

Did you mean 810 on the sat? 1810 is not possible, 1600 is the highest you can get unless they changed it since I took it and then wouldnt that be a good score? Take it a few times anyway. Regardless, you seem like a good student and the kind of kid a college would want, you can choose any school if your credentials are true....

When choosing a major, dont think of the subjects you studied, there so much more in college, think creatively. For example, I love music so I went into communications/broadcasting and music editing. So it is true, if you love something try to relate it to a major thinking in broader terms. It may help for you to browse college websites for courses or when you go visit the school, to ask for a bulletin. I visited several school I was interested in and it really helps to get a feel for the atmosphere. You can also ask a teacher or guidance counselor for help.

If you dont know where to start looking, buy one of those big books of colleges and their requirements they have in barnes and nobles and all book stores. Then pick what you think you want in a college and what location. Ask yourself How much can I afford? Am I willing to live far from my family? Where are my friends going and does that matter? Would you like a campus atmosphere or a school like NYU, where a whole city is like your campus,/very urban? Do you like to party? Do you like rural, quiet settings? Small school vs a big school? What about teams and sports? Questions like that.

Not that some of these should completely determine your college, but you gotta consider the whole package and make sure you are getting the most for your money and are happy and learning something that will help you get a career. So do some research, think about what you like (you dont even have to choose a major for 2 years usually) and visit those schools...

A2A. What classes should I take in high school if I want to major in economics?Academic readiness is one criteria that every school uses for admittance. To find out about this requirement, you would look at the university websites to see what high school classes are required. For example, if four years of science is required, you may need to take an AP science course.To give credible advice, I need to know what courses you have taken to say which AP classes you should take for economics. If you have four AP electives, I recommend AP Calculus AB or BC, AP Microeconomics, AP Macroeconomics, and AP Statistics (in that order).If you are interested in economics, I recommend you look at the Economics and finance | Khan Academy that is the official study site for AP Microeconomics and AP Macroeconomics. There is also a Finance and capital markets course.

How do you choose a college when your major is "undecided"?

For the longest time I was faced with a similar dilemma: nothing seemed to fit me. Then, I had an amazing teacher who inspired me to give a thought about becoming a teacher. I realized we had a lot in common and she was a very sweet person.

However, after thorough research, I decided it wasn't the best idea. Here's what I did:

-Took a few aptitude tests. They may not be on the nose, but they usually come fairly close to what may interest you.

-Researched salary, job outlook, demand, requirements, etc. You can find all of that on the web: google Occupational Outlook handbook (OOH). Type in any job and it will find it for you. It tells you what degree you'll require, and in some cases, even gets specific by state.

- Talked with some people in the field. For teaching, I had an immediate resource, and she was extremely helpful and was honest. For the second one, surgical tech, I had to pull a few strings because I'm merely an acquaintance with the source I used, but he was still extremely helpful.

-Talk with an academic advisor. Start at a junior college so you're not paying 11k+ just to be undecided and take harder classes for nothing.


Research, research, research!

Hope this helps!

This is very much a question of your school system. Is Junior college a two-year program, after which you complete two years at your state college? I know this is very common from Pierce or Santa Monica Junior College to UCLA, but I have no idea where you are. In Washington State, all community colleges are coordinated with the University of Washington. So when you start community college, they have a list of what courses you need to take at the community college (and with what GPA) in order to become a Psychology major at the U. of Washington in Seattle. If you tell me what state you're in, I can see if there's an easy answer. If it's not online,. you'll have to go talk to a counselor.As an example, I have been helping a young woman from Nepal plan her first semester's schedule at the University of Richmond, where she will begin studying this fall. When she had her Skype interview with her official advisor, he thought that we had done a good job, but he recommended that some of the science courses that she had thought to put off until the spring had to be taken in the fall, because they're not offered in both semesters. When I went to Penn, the basic courses were offered in both semesters, so that hadn't occurred to me.There was also a problem with one or two schools on our list that was already full – there were no open seats. There is a way to check which sections have open seats, but you have to first be preregistered in order to access that page. We were unable to see the page a week ago, but now that her advisor has registered her, she can check for availability at the same time that she checks for interest.These are the kind of things that cannot be predicted in advance; each school has its own computer system, its own teaching system, and its own schedule, and you can only get the answers you want from the schools you wish to attend.

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