Cheaper Way to Attend College

In this still-uncertain economy that remains rife with unemployment, hundreds of thousands of out-of-work blue- and white-collar professionals, competing for scarce available jobs are going back to school. Some are going back to obtain their first college degree, others to get an additional or more advanced degree that could give their résumé a much-needed competitive edge in a crowded marketplace.

Demand for the Lower Costs of Community College Programs

Community colleges have traditionally offered lower-income and non-traditional students a lower-priced, commuter-friendly, and part-time alternative to pricier online college degrees and full-time four-year colleges and universities. But the two-year community college degree has posed the same drawbacks as two-year online college degrees: When going up against four-year degrees in a job search, two-year degrees simply aren’t as competitive.

Four-Year Community Colleges Offer a Cost-Convenience Solution

Now, however, students are finding a growing number of four-year degree options at community colleges. As more community colleges respond to increased student demand for affordable higher education, expanding their programs to include four-year bachelor’s degrees and applied baccalaureate degrees, new and returning students are increasingly able to obtain the academic pedigree of a four-year degree with much of the flexibility offered by online college degree programs but at the lower cost of a community college education.

Bachelor’s Degree Programs at Community Colleges Expanding

Florida currently leads the nation with 14 community colleges authorized to award bachelor’s degrees, reports The New York Times, with 12 schools already having done so, in fields including fire safety management and veterinary technology (“Community Colleges Challenge Hierarchy With 4-Year Degrees May 2, 2009). Nationwide, 17 states, including Nevada, Texas, and Washington, have granted community colleges the authority to award associate and bachelor’s degrees.

In some states, community colleges have even become four-year institutions in order to facilitate their new longer programs. At Miami Dade College in Florida — formerly known as Miami Dade Community College — more than 1,000 students are currently enrolled in the school’s bachelor degree programs. The average age of these students is 33.

LaKisha Coleman, a Miami Dade student who will graduate with a college degree in public safety management this spring, recommends the school to family members for its advantages over a traditional four-year degree program at a state or private university.

“It’s much cheaper, the teachers are good, you can do it in the evening while you work, and everyone’s very helpful,” Coleman told The New York Times.

Applied Baccalaureate Degrees Another Burgeoning Community College Offering

In the current economy, at a time when students have fewer financial resources to cover their college costs and job prospects are uncertain, the applied baccalaureate degree is becoming a popular option for students, says Debra Bragg, the director of the Forum on the Future of Public Education at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Usually focusing on applied academics or applied sciences and technologies, an applied baccalaureate degree is a four-year bachelor’s degree that may be earned at both two- and four-year institutions, including technical colleges and community colleges. Unlike bachelor’s degrees at some conventional four-year universities, however, the applied baccalaureate degree counts technical and associate degree–level courses as degree credits, allowing community college students to keep their course costs low and minimize their need for student loans or other financial aid.

“Applied baccalaureate degree programs at community colleges can be used by students looking for a career that is emerging, or for adults who have earned college credits in the past and are looking to re-enter college, often to advance their careers to a supervisory level,” Bragg explains.

Since 2000, the number of states offering an applied baccalaureate degree has doubled, reports the University of Illinois. Currently, 39 states offer the degree.

The applied “real-world” focus of applied baccalaureate programs and coursework is aimed at grooming students to fill projected workforce needs in areas of the country where large concentrations of jobs have been lost due to outsourcing, a shrinking manufacturing base, or a shift in local industry.

“An applied baccalaureate degree represents a viable pathway for someone who previously hadn’t thought about earning a bachelor’s degree,” says Bragg, “but now sees it as a necessary step to getting and keeping a good job with benefits.”

Free Books

It’s expensive going to college and that’s the number one reason for my love/need for ramen.

But one of the more expensive pieces of college living is the books.

But why buy, when you can get em’ for free? I found this site that has over 50 places where you can find free books.

Link - Free Books - 50 Places to Find Free Books Online

Now if they only had a list of 50 places that would write my papers for me.

Cheapest Man in America

You could learn a few things about saving money just from watching this show about the cheapest man in America.

A guy who reuses paper towels and and seperates 2-ply toilet paper into two 1-ply rolls.

I personally have used the method of squeezing ketchup packets into my bottles of ketchup so he can’t be totally insane…right?

Ramen Flavored Bong Hits

If there were ever two things that go together it’s Ramen and Bongs.

Ask any college student.

Use a bong and you will automatically want the ramen.

So here’s a way to have the best of both worlds.

bongramen

Step 1: Cook up some ramen

Step 2: Clean your bong

Step 3: Pour the ramen into your bong

Step 4: Smoke the bong

Step 5: Cough

Step 6: (optional) Eat the ramen

Step 7: …I forgot

Heh, “bong” is a funny word.

I’m still hungry.

The Ramen Girl

Who knew Ramen could be the basis for an entire movie?

Actually, I thought it could but it would be more of a idiotic comedy than a romantic one like this movie featuring Brittany Murphy who is more adorable than usual in the trailer.

She plays an American woman stranded in Tokyo after her boyfriend leaves her and decides to study under a Master Ramen Chef as a profession.

Who comes up with this stuff?

Well the trailer doesn’t look horrible and is possibly something you could take a girlfriend to.

Can I get a Ramen?

This guy takes ramen to a whole new, spiritual level.

Ridiculous Remedies

Ridiculous Remedies. The world is full of them and even to this day some of the worst are practiced by our own grandmothers. Thankfully my grandmother didn’t believe in any of these. Read the rest of this entry »

I Can Has Catburger?

Restaurants in China have been offering a special dish lately.

Cats Boiled Alive.

Cat in Bowl

If that isn’t horrifying enough, the chefs beat the cats with a bat because “the more torture the cats recieve, the better they taste”.

The cats are beaten until unconscious, thrown into hot water, then skinned and boiled again.

Doglovers rejoice.

Menus offer cat meat, cat brains and cat intestines.

I think I’ll just stick to ramen.

- source

World’s Smallest Bowl of Ramen

The University of Tokya’s professor Masayuki Nakao has created the world’s smallest bowl of ramen…kinda.

A 1-micron wide bowl (the bowl was carved from silicon using a metal particale beam) was filled with the “noodles”.

To give you an idea of how big this 1-micron bowl, you could fit 100 hundred of these bowls of ramen in a human hair follicle.

The noodles themselves are 20-nanometers thick and are made of a soup of ethanol and catalyst to form carbon nanotubes.

I doubt they are as delicious as the real thing.

Ramen Noodle Beer Bong

When it comes to college life there are some things that just seem like common sense.

Beer bongs are for drinking.

And Ramen Noodles are for eating.

So why did it take this long for students to come up with the idea of Beer Bonging Ramen Noodles?