Why am I taking College Classes?
Since I was a young child, I always knew I wanted to be a teacher. I can remember forcing my sisters to play school with me, just so I could be their teacher. I enjoyed showing them new, fun math or reading games. Then I loved it when they were able to take what they learned in the game and put it to use on other thing. Now as a mom, I enjoy working with my own kids and helping them learn the many things they are taught in school.
One of the greatest things about continuing to get a degree in education is the feeling that I will be able to help little kids learn and strive in live. As a paraprofessional, I love this feeling. There is nothing in life like the smile on a kids face when they have figured how to do something that they have worked hard to understand. I am looking forward to getting a degree in education so I can experience this great
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feeling everyday. Another reason I am continuing to take college classes is to help make things better for my family.
Right now my husband and I struggle to pay for things. I work six to seven days a week between two jobs. I know that going through college and getting a degree, I will have a better chance of getting paid more an hour or even getting salary pay. This will not only help us to be able to afford things that our kid need, it will also make it easier for me to spend more time with my family.
The final reason I have decided to take college classes is to better myself. I have spent the last few years dreading my decision to start a family before I got a degree. Late during my senior year of high school, I found out that I was pregnant. At that time I was getting ready to enter into
college, but I had to put my child and myself first. Don’t get me wrong, none of my kids will ever be consider mistakes, but I just wish I would have continued on with the path that I had planned. I know looking back I would have been able to handle raising a child while taking a few college classes each
semester. I know that the decision for me to return to college was not that hard. Everything seemed to fall in to place at the right time. I know that attending college just three-quarter time will mean that it will probably take me close to five years to reach my goal, but I am okay with that. I am excited to be returning to college and can’t wait to see what the next few years brings.
Is college worth it? Is college worth the time and energy you invest? This is a question that many students ask themselves as the cost of college rises and jobs are harder to find. As a 27 year, old college student myself I really thought about this question. I had to think back when I first started college at the age of 18 and how I was excited about starting college. I easily got tired of all the work that it took to get the degree so I dropped out. After having my first child and trying to work and take of her and myself with only making minimal wages, barely get by that when I knew college is worth it. A college education is one of the most reliable paths to financial success for students and gives the opportunity
Honestly college at this certain point in time does not seem worth it. Everywhere else in the world college is free but the United States. People would feel more motivated to go to college if it was free. College is the main reason Americans are having to live such a hard lifestyle. My father did not go to college and makes eighteen dollars an hour. On the other hand my aunt did go to college and make twenty-four dollars an hour but is still paying back student loans so after paying all of her stuff back she only makes around fifteen dollars an hour that she gets to bring back and that doesn’t include taxes. That’s the reason college doesn’t seem like a good choice to make in life.
I grew up constantly seeing my parents suffer from choices they made when they were freshly graduated from high school. They always told me to go to college so I wouldn’t have to suffer from the same mistakes they made and I was going to do just that. I decided to take on the student loan debt and continue my education because I refused to settle immediately in life.
College is said to be the gateway to a successful career, and I think no different. One of the main reasons I want a college education is so when I approach an employer they see me and think success. Studies have shown that when you have a college degree you are more likely to make an average 20 thousand more a year. If I was awarded this scholarship money it would completely change things for me; I say this because my family has struggled financially and with this I would be saved from crippling debt in years to come. Another reason a college degree is important to me is because I am striving for financial success so that I do not have to struggle like my parents have. In life money is what makes the world go round, and with a college degree I would be placed in a position where I would be able to achieve a level of financial security that would support myself, and hopefully a
In both “Stop Scaring students”, by Devorah Lieberman and “College is a Waste of Time and Money”, by Caroline Bird, the authors consider the value of college education. Due to the long-term investment in higher education, college students should be informed about certain aspects of college, concerning whether college is beneficial or non-beneficial. Both oppositions present themselves with a strong argument, but only by looking at their similarities and differences one can uncover which is the best path for college students.
The life I have had so far has taught me a lot about academic and life skills; from when I was about six to the age I am now. I am always learning and happy to learn new things. I might not know what I want right now, but I do know that I want something for my life; I want to go to college, so I could make the future I see happen. As you 're reading this you 're probably asking yourself why? Why does going and graduating college mean so much to her? What makes her different from all the others? Well, to answer all those questions you would have to continue reading as I explain some of the moments in my life, in which they brought me to the conclusion that I have to go to college.
In the generation we live in now college is not option or privilege. College nowadays is necessity. The big question is that is college education worth it. College can be worth it, but it also is not worth. I will explain why in this paper. A lot of people are successful, and they haven’t stepped a foot in a college, and they are doing better than a person who has received a degree. Both sides of the argument have a view.
Going to college is something that has been drilled into my brain by the public education system since I was in first grade. They obviously did a phenomenal job because here I am, a high school senior, applying to various colleges and universities trying to find the right fit. There are many reasons why I want to go to college, but there is one reason above all others, and that is that I want to be able to share my passion of music with others in hopes of sparking a similar passion inside of them.
My primary reason for going to college is to have a higher chance for a more fulfilling future. I am getting my degree to be able to have a career in something I’m truly interested in, so I can have a job I won’t get tired of attending every day. Working minimum wage with long hours just to pay the rent isn’t the kind of life I look forward too. Just the thought of being successful by doing something I love is enough motivation to continue going to school and pursuing my degree; not many people get to say that they’ve accomplished that. Getting this degree will not only prepare me for my future job, but I will be qualified to get one as soon as I graduate.
To obtain or not obtain a college a degree has been the thought running through every person’s brain that has gone through and completed high school. For me, I remember sitting down with my mom one Sunday morning watching Good Times while she was reading that day 's paper and drinking coffee; just out of the blue I dozed off into my state of consciousness and started wondering what and how life could be if I decided not to go to college at all. So I turned around on the couch and faced my mom, who was highly concentrated on the article she was reading, and I just blurted out, “Mom what if I choose not to go to college?” She sat her coffee and newspaper down on the table and said “Well if you don’t go to college then you will be stuck working 2 or 3 minimum wage jobs just to survive and support yourself. And I’m not going to be of any help to you if decide this route. I will back you 100%, but I will not be of any good use when you need help paying your bills.” I whined, “But mom I don’t even see why it’s important for me to waste four more years of my life just to work for someone else.” She then took a sip of her coffee that was still noticeably hot
College is a very important thing. If you go to college you will most likely get better pay in your career. Also, with a college degree, you have more opportunities. I believe that everyone should go to college. If you don’t go to college and just go into some job and that fails then you have no backup plan. A college graduate is more likely to be offered employment than another who didn’t attend college, if you have a college degree you will make more money in your lifetime than someone who doesn’t have a degree, if you are considering having children having a college degree is very beneficial to them, you have a higher chance of having better health yourself, college is very beneficial, and if you go to college you will have a better social
I am very interested in pursuing my Masters Degree at some point, but my main goal is to get out into the school system as a teacher. The most important thing that I have learned in my life is the importance of education. Living in a world bursting with advantages and opportunities for those in education, I find it both a priority and a privilege to share the gift of knowledge with the future of society. Even more, I find it an honor to be able to have the chance.
Through my own experiences, and as enforced by others' opinions in the profession, I have found that teaching is one of the most rewarding careers. Not only are you placed in the position of instructing and guiding children and young adults through the life long learning process, but you are able to give back to the schools and communities which have supported your early education and experiences that opened you up to a bright future. In becoming an educator, I hope to someday share the knowledge and lend the helping, supportive hand that I was once given, allowing students to formulate their own perspectives of the multicultural society and world around them. Teaching is a career I have been interested in pursuing throughout high school, and as my experiences and study in the field expands, I feel that my desire to teach will grow stronger and develop more soundly.
Becoming a teacher has been the ultimate aspiration for myself since the first day I walked into kindergarten. As a very timid student, it was a difficult task transitioning from being with my mother everyday, to being part of a classroom environment full of strangers. However, my kindergarten teacher helped me through this transition smoothly, and adequately. I very quickly learned to love school. Soon after, I knew I would aspire to become a teacher. I would spend countless hours at home with a blackboard, acting as a teacher to my imaginary students throughout my elementary school years.
I am so excited about one day teaching our children. My goal is to be a positive influence on a child and I cannot imagine anything more important to do with my life than helping children. A quote from Herbert Kohl sums up my feelings of becoming an educator: “I believe the impulse to teach is fundamentally altruistic and represents a desire to share what you value and to empower others. I am not talking about the job of teaching so much as the calling to teach. Most teachers I know have felt that calling at some time in their lives.” My dream is to someday soon fulfill my calling.