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Best. Day. Ever.

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funkapottomous

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 1, 2010
Messages
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Location
Houston
So, a little backstory first.

In the spring of 2011, I went and spoke with my advisor (for college) who gave me a list of all the classes I needed to graduate.

I took fifteen hours in the spring, twelve over the summer and fifteen over fall, thinking that I only needed another fifteen hours and I would be done. (meaning, I'd only have to take five classes in the spring)

Cut to November. I am in the advising center, with a different advisor, and I mention graduation in May. She looks at me funny.

b-1b_dropping_m_%2082_bombs.jpe


"You know you have 21 hours left to graduate, right? ANNNNND you can't take this strategic management course without taking this finance course first. Why did you take the other finance course this semester"

".......because....nobody....told me...it...was...a....pre-req...."

john-goodman_480_poster.jpg



SO.

I sign up for a correspondence course to take the finance class.

Over the christmas holidays, I check my grades and look at my unofficial transcript and O NOES I FAILED A CLASS!?

WTF MATE. So I email the professor and ask what's up, and also to speak with him, because if I actually failed I want to know what I did wrong.

No Answer.




Fast Forward to today.

I am under the impression that when I finish this Finance course, that I will need to take 18 hours and then go beg and plead with the dean to allow me to take another correspondence course for Business Law, which will put me at 21 hours.

I will be working ALL semester, have no free time, but I will graduate in May, God damnit.

I go and talk to the man with the plan, so he can push me into the management class I still need and I mention needing to take business law. He looks at me funny and tells me I DON'T NEED IT BECAUSE I PASSED AND THE PROFESSOR NEVER BOTHERED TO EMAIL ME BACK LETTING ME KNOW IT WAS HIS MISTAKE AND HE CHANGED MY GRADE



:ban::ban::ban::ban::ban:
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TL;DR
Professor forgot to tell me he graded wrong and I am no longer going to bring guns to school.
 
If that represents your "best. day. ever.", I think you may need a night out to get loaded and laid.
 
Half way through your post, I assumed the title of this thread was sarcasm. After finishing it and realizing it wasn't sarcasm, I immediately thought the same thing as JohnnyO.
 
If it were the best day ever, the advisor would have asked WTF are you doing here, you already graduated sigma cum laude? Didn't you get that job offer from Google? They sent me a copy of the offer letter and I think I'd take the job even though $600k seems a little low.

Followed by a supermodel picking you up at a bar and taking you on a whirlwind orgy with all her friends.
 
Had a similar issue and let me tell you, realizing you don't have to take (and pay for) an extra semester ranks up there in good days.

Senior year I was told I hadn't taken Calculus and it was required to graduate. Buttttt I took AP Calc in highschool and the I thought the credits transferred? Nope, the C you received actually transferred as a C- by our standards, so it didn't count. Even though your guidance counselor said it had. And you haven't taken a math class since Freshman year. I took it all the way to the dean and somehow dodged that bullet. Cue dancing banana man.
 
Do kids who want to graduate these days, actually listen to the guidance counselor? 15-20 years ago, we knew they were there to keep you in school longer and actually used the catalog to figure out what we needed, then told the GC to sign off on the class schedule we set up.
 
Cool. Sounds like we are very much in the same boat. I am a finance major graduating in May and a lot of those classes are ones I've had/have.

However, our best days ever differ. Mine includes a fight, a stun gun, a fog machine and an Asian women. Other than that we're basically brothers.
 
Do kids who want to graduate these days, actually listen to the guidance counselor? 15-20 years ago, we knew they were there to keep you in school longer and actually used the catalog to figure out what we needed, then told the GC to sign off on the class schedule we set up.

I was a mixture of both. My first year of college I listened to the GC as if he were god. Then I started doing my own research and only used the GC to ask if what I picked for my schedule was a good enough course load or not. I always knew all the pre-reqs and what was left for me to graduate.

Though I will say, I can totally see this as being the best day ever. A better day will be when you finally get that piece of paper in your hand followed shortly by a job offer.
 
If that represents your "best. day. ever.", I think you may need a night out to get loaded and laid.

Getting twisted and twisting a female is small accomplishment.

Going through hell to get the grade you deserve takes real perseverance
 
Getting twisted and twisting a female is small accomplishment.

Going through hell to get the grade you deserve takes real perseverance
seriously, if I wanted to get drunk and get laid, all I have to do is go home and get drunk. :mug:
 
OP is psyched. Gets to get out of college and work for the next 40 years.

Honestly, I've never understood why kids are so damned pleased to be done with school.
 
Take it from someone who now has a fair portion of it: it's totally over rated.

You're right. It is overrated. But unfortunately it's the only real standard of competency we have to judge by... Unless you have your own set of skills that are profitable, we just have to play the game.
 
You're right. It is overrated. But unfortunately it's the only real standard of competency we have to judge by... Unless you have your own set of skills that are profitable, we just have to play the game.

Oh for sure. I just don't understand why so many kids are so damned eager to start.
 
If you guys didn't get a good education, then shame on your institution. College isn't just a means to gainful employment; it is a way to elevate your understanding of the world. All those lib arts classes, the humanities, history, these are the foundations of our modern society.

Anyone who belittles a college education belittles themselves. Sad.

Sure, money isn't a direct path to happiness (helps pay for 3 kids through college though I'm here to say), but the enlightenment from studying anything for that long, as well as the mental exercise of getting through it, and the fortitude to stick it out, means something in my book.
 
If you guys didn't get a good education, then shame on your institution. College isn't just a means to gainful employment; it is a way to elevate your understanding of the world. All those lib arts classes, the humanities, history, these are the foundations of our modern society.

Anyone who belittles a college education belittles themselves. Sad.

Sure, money isn't a direct path to happiness (helps pay for 3 kids through college though I'm here to say), but the enlightenment from studying anything for that long, as well as the mental exercise of getting through it, and the fortitude to stick it out, means something in my book.

Thanks.

I don't really know what to say in response to some of the other posts (without being a dick) so uh....yeah.
 
If you guys didn't get a good education, then shame on your institution. College isn't just a means to gainful employment; it is a way to elevate your understanding of the world. All those lib arts classes, the humanities, history, these are the foundations of our modern society.

Anyone who belittles a college education belittles themselves. Sad.

Sure, money isn't a direct path to happiness (helps pay for 3 kids through college though I'm here to say), but the enlightenment from studying anything for that long, as well as the mental exercise of getting through it, and the fortitude to stick it out, means something in my book.

I agree. That's why I advocate staying in school as long as possible and being in exactly no rush to graduate.

The years I spent in university were the best...well 11 of 14 of them anyway!
 
I wouldn't blame the college for a sub-par education. I went to a great state school for a year (Texas A&M...think what you will) and it came down to a simple matter of finances for me. I was in the business school and after running the numbers I'd have accrued near 80k in student loans. Compound that with interest over however long it'd have taken me to pay off and I couldn't make it make sense with the advancement opportunities in a company having a degree/not having one. I understand your argument about the diversity of studies in relation to worldliness but it's a very small percentage of people who retain that information beyond their exams. You cannot teach someone who has no interest in the subject matter, though they can easily memorize the info in the short term. It's sad but that really is the concept my generation has been indoctrinated with via every standardized test the educational system has come up with to streamline the educational process. I will agree that the fortitude to make it through the process in admirable but it doesn't necessarily mean that you will come out on the other side with any more intellect.
 

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