Attending college to obtain a college degree entails a serious investment of time and money, so it’s important to learn as much as possible about your school of choice and program of study before the first semester begins.
Consider your strengths, interests, financial and career goals, and the current job market while making this decision. Career aptitude tests, guidance counselors, and individuals currently employed in potential fields of interest can be an invaluable resource during this process.
Once you have a clear direction in mind, the next step is choosing the right undergraduate college and, more importantly, getting accepted.
The Undergrad Zone provides you with resources to help you research schools, prepare for interviews, outline essays, and plan the right path toward your career goals.
How to protect your professional reputation as more businesses use social networking to check out applicants
As graduation rapidly approaches, students have been frantically searching for work after college. And while they’ve likely bought a new, more professional wardrobe for upcoming interviews, such a move isn’t the only necessarily course of post-grad action.
More and more colleges are now suggesting that students also give their social networking pages a second look as well
As The Valley Vanguard, the student paper for Saginaw Valley State University, reports, employers now use sites like Facebook, MySpace and Twitter to learn more about their applicants, since those sites have made it very easy for friends-and employers-to find one another.
[Read all of college grad clean up your facebook profile]
When it comes to hate and racism, there is a tendency to think that certain places are above such pettiness. Our college campuses are thought to be one of those places.
However, we eventually come to the realization that college, like any other place will always be a reflection of the greater society.
The incidents mentioned in this article do not surprise me nor should they catch you off-guard, because it is clear that America has (and may always have) a race problem.
Excerpts from the article appear below.
“It’s tempting to think of college campuses as islands of enlightenment, places where students embrace new ideas, people and cultures without the specter of hate hanging overhead.
Tempting. But it’s not always the case, as demonstrated by events on campuses across the nation in recent months…”
[Read all of "Colleges not immune to hate-crime mentality"]
This article was taken from the Seattle times, April 16, 2010, but was actually originates from Tim Barker of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Photo is courtesy of: Pauuwithw’s photostream