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With my absurd levels of AP (IB) credit and rigorous academic scheduling, I have the unique opportunity of graduating with a BS in CS in 3 years. Now, I have four years of paid (+large stipend) school, so losing a year would be cutting out about $10,000 in stipend money, or about $20,000 worth of value, classes included. Now, I could probably make much more money than I do now out of college (I have a reasonable amount of work experience), but I was wondering if anyone thought that it would be better to pursue a second degree with my remaining time than to just graduate.

Thoughts? Has anyone else been in the 3-year graduation situation? What are my pros and cons?

Thanks.

Edit: How is this question not relevant while masters/MBA questions are? Is programming separated entirely from business? I don't think so, and if you do you're foolish.

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closed as not programming related by LFSR Consulting, Jon B, seth, gnovice, Stefano Borini Sep 15 at 16:39

4 Answers

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Why are you in such a hurry to leave college? Enjoy it while it lasts and get a second degree in your fourth year. Especially if you have stipend money. I don't see any downside to staying in college for the 4th year unless you are incurring large student loans that you think you'll have a hard time paying off. I don't think you want to miss out on your senior year of college.

Btw, college is much more fun than work -- in case you were wondering. :-)

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college is much more fun than work Not necesarilly ;) – voyager Sep 15 at 16:39
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College tail is way better than office tail.

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You really shouldn't be getting rep for this answer XD (but I agree) – voyager Sep 15 at 17:35
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I'm already in a committed relationship, but that doesn't make this sentence any less true. – Stefan Kendall Sep 15 at 17:41
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Stay 4 years and enjoy the academic life while you can. The free time will enable you to pursue personal projects, friendships, and personal growth. Big Pro for this: summers.

As a newbie hire out of college, you might find yourself working much longer hours than you expected. Time starts to fly by fast when you are working 40, 50, 60+ hours per week, fifty weeks per year.

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As I see it, get your title and get some real work.

College doesn't really make you smart nor knowledgable. It allows you to learn quickly new concepts as needed.

That's why real world experience is very important.

Graduate as soon as you can and start earning more money (you'd also avoid the expense in college).

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