The University of Houston
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When you generally say consider the top 3 colleges in your state to attend to, is this because attending anything lower you will not succeed? Also, if I do major in engineering (mechanical specifically), will I still have the open options (that will help me excell and rise in the buisness world) though I did attend a 4th quarter or non-top 3 school? |
Major: Other (This Major's Salary over time)
Take time to review the chapters not covered in class. They'll help for the next class. Math diverges at higher levels, learn the basics and master arithmetic in your head. Don't depend on a calculator. Professors at college rarely ever have a real job on their resume, so don't expect them to know what you "should know" in the real world. A college degree doesn't entitle you to a job, just demonstrates that you are willing to "go the distance" to achieve a goal. In summary, go to college right away, it's only more expensive and harder to attain later. In the real world, there are always candidates far more superior than you competing for a job you really want . . . and you guessed it, they get the job. Your choice of college does matter, it should be in the top 3 of your state. Engineering leads to more positions than most any other field, so you'll have the time and the ability to make career changes that don't hurt your career path to happiness.