Community College vs. University

Trying to decide whether to attend a community college or a university right out of high school is a question worthy of pondering. I’ve attended both (university, then CC, then university) and each has its pros and cons.

Class Size

Community Colleges tend toward fewer students per class, which means more student/teacher interaction. This is good for students who like access to their instructors so they can ask questions and avoid getting lost (in the course material or in the shuffle).

Universities usually have massive auditoriums full of a few hundred students, all of whom are trying to keep their heads above water and have hordes of fellow student to compete with for the prof’s office hours. Higher level courses have smaller class sizes (the riff-raff have been weeded out and those left have proven their mettle).

Campus Housing

Community Colleges rarely have on-campus housing to offer.

Universities generally have one or more version of campus housing in order to accommodate students, grad students, faculty, married students, etc.

Expense

Community College will put less of a dent in your college fund.

University tuition costs vary depending upon whether they are public or private, but are more expensive than community colleges.

Caliber of Instruction

At any school there are the amazing instructors and the dismal ones. It’s just the way it goes. I have experienced both kinds at two-year and at four-year schools.

A lot of great instructors teach at community colleges because they actually want to teach and not do the whole publish-or-perish game. I’ve had community college instructors who were there because they wanted to teach at a college-level and they were effing good at it. They could break down some utterly confusing and complicated calculus or chemistry or physics moment into its most simplified, basic form and with one eloquent statement sweep it up, explain it, and have it all fall into place, fully comprehended, in my head.

I’ve had university profs who were so busy with their research (which is, unfortunately, the only way to achieve and maintain professor status) that they were more like silent partners in the course and their TA’s did the actual teaching and question-fielding. But I’ve also had ass-kicking professors who clearly went into their chosen field because it is the thing that makes their world complete and they are happiest standing in classroom explaining their idea of perfection to college students.

Architecture

Community Colleges are rarely architecturally stunning as they tend to lack both real estate and funding.

University architecture is what we all think of when we picture a college campus: the buildings vary depending upon the decade in which they were built, but overall a university campus is usually far superior to its community college counterpart.

Transition Issues

The transition from high school to a community college is easier, but you miss out on all the dorm parts.

Jumping from high school to college isn’t as smooth as it could be, but moving away from home when you’re a barely legal adult and living sans parental supervision in a puke-infested dorm is the American version of painfully unmentionable tribal rites of passage. It’s a grow-up-quick, sink-or-swim, survival-of-the-fittest situation and it is what memories are made of.

Degrees Obtainable

Community colleges offer Associate of Arts degrees, nothing higher. However, they are extremely useful as a means to a transfer end: most general ed. coursework that a university requires of its freshmen and sophomores can be taken at a community college.

At a university you can be educated to within an inch of your life: they offer Bachelor’s degrees, Master’s degrees and Doctorates. Go crazy.

College Life

Little or none at a community college.

Lots at a university. Sports, clubs, bonding with fellow collegians, you name it.

Posted by Alexa Harrington

  • Trackback are closed
  • Comments (16)
  1. @everyone–I’m glad you’ve all enjoyed the list and have found it helpful!

    • angie
    • January 20th, 2009

    what if you take ap classes and pass them in highschool? does it make a difference if you go to college or university?

  2. Angie,

    If you take AP classes in high school and pass them, then you’re probably a great student. In your comment you asked whether it mattered if you went to college or university. Did you mean a two-year college vs. a four-year college or university? Honestly, in the long run it doesn’t matter (career-wise) if you attend a two-year community college directly after high school, and then transfer to a four-year college or a four-year university in order to complete your degree, or if you go straight to a four-year institution after high school. Anyone looking to hire you will only care that you have a college degree, they won’t much care the route you took to acquire the degree.

    All of which means that it’s up to you whether you spend two less-expensive (and oftentimes less-overwhelming) years at a community college prior to transferring to a four-year college/university, or whether you go right from high school to a four-year school.

    I wasn’t entirely clear on what your question was, so please let me know if I haven’t answered it. Take care,

    Alexa

    • Marques J
    • January 23rd, 2009

    What are the pro and cons of these New Colleges(Uei,everest,Plus thousands of others etc) popping up everwhere and TV offering degrees from Bachelor to Masters. Are they Creditable?

    They use to be called technical schools, now they are called colleges. Are they really college? How did they become college. The reason I ask is my nices is going to one of these schools and she believes she will be getting a top education that is goint caltpult her into the “Criminal justice” career.

    Can you transfer these credits to a major university?

    I attented a technical school in late
    60s and early 70s (informatin service, computer programing(RPG, COBOL, Fortran,IBM RPG ,Information Processing Language(IPL),JCL)

    I hope somebody can answer this question.

    • Davin Ross
    • January 26th, 2009

    i currently attend keiser university its a great school all the teacher are wonderful i have no complaint but my major is paramedic/fire fighter and keiser doesnt offer that program so i found out that City College does have that program at there school but i told a couple of my friend that was going to transfer and they stated that i shouldnt go tot hat school because its not an accreditted school so i just wanted to find out some more information before i totally committ to that school

Comments are closed.