A type of college you pay for by course units over the traditional semester-
set fees in universities.
A term which people on Urban
Dictionary rant the shit out of, because they thought they could graduate with an associate's degree and be set for life, or take any courses they want and expect to transfer to a top-prestigious school. Sorry, but that's not how it works.
It's nobody's fault but your own if you weren't aware of what credits would transfer or not. You'
re supposed to plan this before you enroll in your classes. If you plan on transferring to state college, ideally within the same state, you're not going to have issues with your credits. However, taking intermediate algebra over college algebra isn't going to fly with most universities. If you feel your college or guidance office failed you, why
don't you rant on about that particular school, so that people can spend their money elsewhere?
Trying to convince people on Urban
Dictionary to avoid comm. college, or mostly trying to belittle people who do
go because of YOUR misfortune is just petty. When you're in tough economic times, and financial aid doesn't give a pot to piss in, people
don't have much of a choice these days. Community college can offer
great benefits for some people, including affordable tuition & high flexibility, while being able to take your
standard freshman/sophomore courses.
A lot of people transfer from college to university, and a lot do not. Nobody is to blame in life but yourself.