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Old Aug 23, 2011, 04:18 PM
RomanSunburn's Avatar
RomanSunburn RomanSunburn is offline
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Member Since: May 2008
Location: East Coast, USA
Posts: 1,293
Hi all! So, I'm pretty excited. About a week ago, I submitted my transfer application to the state school in my new state. I also had to get my transcripts from my two previous universities. One of them I did online, and the other I did through the mail, and received an email yesterday saying they had mailed my transcripts to my new school. I also had to do proof of residency/intent to maintain a home in my new state and fill out FAFSA.

And now.. I wait. I don't think they start making decisions until October, but I want to know noooow. This is the first time since high school (I graduated 6 years ago...) that I'm actually excited about college. I'm worried, though, because I'm 24 and working on my bachelors degree, so the majority of the students will be younger than me.

I'm a little nervous about a couple of things. Getting back into the swing of school, but I"m starting as a part time student, so that should help. And definitely about making friends. I really want to get involved on campus and everything. I"m a little nervous because the first semester, we'll be living probably about 20-30 minutes away from campus, so it'll be harder to get involved. I also don't know how I"m going to explain my past and why it took me so long to get to where I am...

Okay, that's all. Just wanted to tell someone since I"ve been so excited and nervous. I'd love to hear others experiences, tips, advice, anything. Thanks all!

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  #2  
Old Aug 25, 2011, 11:45 AM
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Perna Perna is offline
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Member Since: Sep 2006
Location: Maryland
Posts: 27,289
How exciting, Roman! Don't worry about the age thing, a lot of people are older these days; I got my second degree in 2007 and was 56 (had been working on it since around 2001)! I'm sure you're get accepted since you already have successful college work behind you; that's exactly what they're looking for.
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RomanSunburn
  #3  
Old Aug 27, 2011, 10:17 PM
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DePressMe DePressMe is offline
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Member Since: Mar 2007
Location: Indiana
Posts: 3,921
I also went back to school after taking several years off after I graduated from high school. I use to feel awkward because I was an older student. But what I found was that I was in the same boat as the younger students. We all had school anxiety and many of us struggled with motivation and depression. I had to reach out to the other students and by the time I was graduated I had a lot of good friends. I hope you find the same in your college career.
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RomanSunburn
  #4  
Old Aug 28, 2011, 02:24 AM
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Oxidopamine Oxidopamine is offline
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Member Since: Jul 2011
Location: Canada
Posts: 293
There are many students in my classes who were 24-25ish all the way up to in their 60s. Since there's not a massive age gap, you'll probably fit right in as students may not even be able to tell whether you're 24, 25, 21 or 20 years old. You don't have to explain why you're at college at 24 years old, unless the administration asks you. To be friendly to younger students, you can give a summary of the explanation because if it's a long, complicated story, telling all of it may turn some people away as it could evoke a cloud of misery and sadness around you.

Using myself as an example, I graduated high-school at a younger age than most. I started pre-school 1 year early (most start at around 5-6 years old, I started just shy of 4 years old), skipped a grade in elementary school (or rather 2 grades since they had split-grade classes), etc... . Fellow students and random people even to this day mistake me for being a high-school kid as I look pretty young, despite being in my final year. It sucked at first because I felt out of place with the majority of other students who were 1-2 years older. I tried to dress in various styles of clothing hoping that would help, although it made some things worse as my friends became confused why I was showing up to classes with such sudden shifts in clothing style.

However, I realized that being younger or older doesn't matter for one simple reason: the majority of students are there to learn and study. I found this out when part-time students in their 40s-50s were in study groups with other 20-something students. I thought to myself, "if that guy has over 30 years on them yet they're fine with it, then surely being a few years younger wouldn't matter". I was right. I'm a member of 4 clubs on campus and go to some of their events. While the clubs are more social than academic, it's still an academic setting so the other students don't really care how old you are or your life story of what brought you to the campus. I don't mean to sound cynical if I am, it's a set of observations that time after time have shown to be consistent.

Good luck on your studies.
Thanks for this!
RomanSunburn
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