yes
I do not think it depends on the race to graduate college, but rather the individual.
She did not attend college but rather was presented with an honorary degree from Berklee College of Music in 2006.
She did not attend college but rather was presented with an honorary degree from Berklee College of Music in 2006.
Several biographies of Dan Rather state that neither parent attended college, and in fact his father never graduated from high school.
She did not attend college but rather was presented with an honorary degree from Berklee College of Music in 2006.
College takes a lot of time and money, and most people who graduate college, graduate with a significant amount of debt. Some people would rather make less money without having debt, then make more money with $40,000 in debt. There is also the group that cannot afford college all together.
A college that has a school of journalism offers special classes and opportunities for students who want to report news or write professionally in other ways. They will be able to graduate with a degree in journalism from that college, rather than with just a major in journalism from another school.
it is fine to graduate from an "ok" school it just depends on your result not so much what your school was like. Its up to you but in my opinion colleges look for those students that have good marks rather than what school they go to it is fine to graduate from an "ok" school it just depends on your result not so much what your school was like. Its up to you but in my opinion colleges look for those students that have good marks rather than what school they go to
A professor is a teacher, so if you aspire to that endeavor, you'll need a teaching degree. You'll also need to pursue a graduate degree and a doctoral degree as well. In order to avoid the higher salaries, most universities aren't tenuring professors these days. Rather, the field is highly competitive for instructor jobs. Through grad school and the doctoral work, candidates often teach in the college classroom as part of a graduate assistantship (GA) or teaching assistantship (TA).
The correct wording is simply "B.S.N." It means Bachelors of Science in Nursing. Entry level nursing jobs now require a B.S.N. rather than a "Diploma R.N." B.S.N. graduate from a 4-year college. Diploma R.N.s graduate from a 2-year nursing school. Now almost all nursing schools require students to achieve a B.S.N. usually in cooperation with a nearby accredited college.
Graduating from college is all about the amount of time that you put into it, it doesn't matter if you are going traditional, online, or a combination. Therefore, if you put more of your time into it you can get it done more quickly. The only real difference here is that online learning can be convenient time wise, allowing you to get more done in the same amount of time.
Better business. With a better business money will follow.