You can save up to 30% by choosing a Community College. You still get a Good Education. Think of it as buying Name brands Versus Generics. Most of them are essentialy the same.
Attending a community college is significantly less costly than attending a private university, by tens of thousands of dollars.
It will cost anywhere from $100 to $500. Most community college classes are cheaper than typical university classes.
A university diploma is much better, and more expensive, than a diploma from a community college.
Many online technical schools, such as University of Phoenix and DeVry University, offer degrees in operational management. However, I would suggest looking for the degree at a local community college. It is much cheaper.
The cheapest place to take actual college level psychology courses would probably at a local community college. They would be much cheaper than taking the same course at a "bigger" university.
At a community college, the class can range anywhere from $100 to $500. They are usually cheaper than 4 year universities.
Paying for community college is much cheaper than financing the education you would get at a university. Community college finance options are found easier than others because the school is smaller and the tuition is not as high. Community colleges will accept scholarships and grants just like any other school, and you can use the extra money for school supplies or living expenses. If you live in a city that has a community college, try beginning your college career there and then go to a larger school.
they cannot be compared, community college is cheaper, and definitely a great option for the first 2 years. But private school is so much harder, much better reputations, but a lot of cash if you do not get scholarship. I spent one year at a community college, it was very easy and in my opinion not challenging at all. Then i went to Bowling Green State University, a public college, and that is a nice step up in challenging academics, much cheaper than private school, and has a much better reputation than community colleges. After one year there, i transferred to Wesleyan in Connecticut, which is much much more challenging than both community and state colleges. I supose it was a really big leap, considering BGSU is not one of the best public schools, and Wesleyan is a little Ivy, a group of 3 liberal arts colleges that were too small to be ivy league schools, but still have the academic reputation of the ivies. but i would say Community College--------> Public College---------> and then Private College.
You can go to college with pretty much any GPA. You can always go to a community college and then transfer to a university. College admission boards look at your Junior year of High School more than anything else, so make sure you did well then. If not, go ahead with the community college course. But make sure that your credits earned in the community college are transferrable to the University. Good luck!
The cost of tuition of public college varies on several factors. These include what type of college whether it is a technical school/community college or a university. The state in which the college is in also effects the cost, as well as the college itself. For example Clemson University (SC) is slightly higher in terms of tuition than the University of South Carolina is.
A professor at a university requires a Ph.D. A professor at a community college requires a masters degree.
Check with your community college system. They often have courses for this area and are much cheaper than a private vocational school.
Depending on what learning institution you are using: a community college or a University or other private school, the latter of which can cost much more.