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Friday Fun Thread for September 22, 2023

Be advised: this thread is not for serious in-depth discussion of weighty topics (we have a link for that), this thread is not for anything Culture War related. This thread is for Fun. You got jokes? Share 'em. You got silly questions? Ask 'em.

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What is the most credit hours people here had in ug. This is a place where I believe people like learning things. To graduate I believe you need around 120. I had a lot of AP credit, took 6 courses a few times, did a few summer programs, and a few spring break programs. I did back off senior year and took 4 courses for more bar time. I forget the exact number but I was over 150 credit hours.

One thing I remember is taking coursework in writing specifically because I have bad grammar. I got a C+ my worse grade. Which is one thing I find wrong with college where you want to maximize gpa but as far as skills go you should be taking coursework on your weaknesses.

How can one have "the most credit hours" ? You have what you have.

I had like 142 I think. Electrical Engineering with an Economics minor.

Also as the other guy said, Imagine going to college lol.

Imagine going to college.

Usually 6 classes a semester, in addition to AP credits and 1-2 summer classes. I graduated in three years, which was bittersweet since college was a ton of fun and it took a while to get over missing that last year. On the other hand... tuition is expensive, and I'm glad to not have that year's worth of debt hanging over me.

No idea. For the first couple years, all my electives were going towards my minor. At the end, I did a program where I got to put credit towards my Master's, so my last couple semesters were slammed.

I sure didn't pick classes to shore up weaknesses. I took them to learn more about subfields of my specialization. It's a complicated world; once you have basic competence in the 3 Rs, you need all the comparative advantage you can get.

I had a ton. I went into college with 8 AP tests and ended up taking 5 years to complete my EE degree (dicked around with different low div courses before settling on engineering my junior year).

I was on the quarter system so I don’t know how that compares to semesters. But EE required something like 180 units, and I had something like 250.

I don't remember the credit hours, but I basically did the bare minimum to graduate with a history degree and then bail the fuck out. By the time I was in my fourth year I had realized that the academic world is so corrupt it's pointless to try and 'learn' anything there, at least in the humanities.

I think the only reason to do a humanities subject is either if you want to learn from a specific professor who you believe has more knowledge than they’ve put on paper/in articles, or if you’re extremely lazy at self-directed learning and need the structure of regular essays, submissions, tests etc to learn anything. Or if you want to do your own thing and get paid for it and it’s a stepping stone to a PhD and then independent research/teaching for money

Agreed, and there are some genuinely brilliant people doing research in the humanities. Unfortunately trying to get to those specific professors typically requires a massive amount of networking and knowing very early on in your college career that you need to angle for that sort of thing, because the competition is massive.

Either that, or you are able to spend an extra year or two in undergrad building your network due to family money etc etc.

In terms of being extremely lazy at self-directed learning... I don't know. I think autodidacts, the type of person these discussion spaces typically attracts, are extremely rare and abnormal in the grand scheme of things. It's good that modern society gives us opportunities, but I hesitate to call people that need the structure of a college curriculum "extremely lazy." I think there's maybe 1% of adults in the West that can legitimately learn a significant amount about serious topics on their own, and I wouldn't be surprised if the distribution were even smaller than that.

I'll throw in though that a large part of the issues is the way our schooling works. Standardized public education in the US at least is pretty brutally effective at shutting down the curiosity of passionate young children.

I think I graduated with 150 some? It was far more than necessary (I started in EE and ended in Econ and Finance and needed to take 16-18 hours per period and an extra year to fulfill the new degree requirements).