Showing posts with label schools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label schools. Show all posts

More fun links for Nontrad students!

Here are some fun links to try.

Parent blogs

Working Moms Against Guilt
http://www.workingmomsagainstguilt.com/

Coolmompicks
http://www.coolmompicks.com/

Parent Hacks
http://www.parenthacks.com/

Life blogs

Ikea Hacker
http://ikeahacker.blogspot.com/

The Unclutterer Site
http://unclutterer.com/

Special Interest blogs

Junkraft
http://junkraft.blogspot.com/

“Sailing to Hawaii on 15,000 plastic bottles and a Cessna 310, to raise awareness about plastic fouling our oceans.”

My Year of Getting Published
http://writetotravel.blogspot.com/

College and University blogs for nontrads

Continuing Education at Suite 101
http://continuingeducation.suite101.com/blogs.cfm

The Financial Aid Blog
http://www.collegescholarships.org/blog/

Study Hacks
http://www.calnewport.com/blog/

Other sites:

The Self-directed Student Toolbox
http://oedb.org/library/beginning-online-learning/the-self-directed-student-toolbox-100-web-resources-for-lifelong-learners

BIBLIO

Find even more great blogs:

Blog of the Day Awards
http://blogofthedayawards.blogspot.com/2008/07/muni-manners-etiquette-guide-for.html

Forbes blog list from 2004
http://www.forbes.com/2003/04/14/bestblogslander.html

Blogger’s blog list
http://www.blogger.com/home

Best Blogs from RealSimple
http://www.realsimple.com/realsimple/gallery/0,21863,1707840,00.html

What are the top Nontraditional Student issues?

WHAT OTHER PAGES SHOULD GO ON THE NONTRAD SITE?
I put a box on the Nontraditional Student site on the first page asking what other non-traditional students would like to have as the next page on the site.

So far, 19 people have voted. Here are the top three subjects people would like to see on the site:

1. The Best Schools for Nontraditional Students
2. Nontraditional Student Homework Help
3. This is a tie - with three ideas, Motivation, Time Savers, and Jobs and Home Businesses.

I also have another poll - Top Issues, which is located down the right side on this blog. The number one issue that people have voted for as Most Important is Keeping Up with Job and Family Responsibilities.

For nontraditional students who would like to talk about these issues and more, there is a Yahoo Nontrads Group that is open to new members.

That's it for today. Good luck, nontraditional students, on all the juggling you do with school, home, work, and more. Check out the links below to find out more.

The Yahoo Nontrads Group

The Nontraditional Student website

Email me with ideas for this blog

Later, gators!



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Careers vs. jobs... and Tickle tests

Face it. Non-traditional students want a career... not just a job. That's why many of them are going back to school. They want to improve their lives AND their careers.

It can be hard to decide on a new career, or pinpoint just what classes to take. Sometimes it helps to know more about ourselves and what we really want. A resource I have found valuable is the Tickle site.

The Tickle site is a free testing site that also has some fun quizzes. The great thing about Tickle is that many (over 60) are what the site calls Ph.D. Certified, or using real test standards.

Tickle has several tests that can be valuable to non-traditional students. I will list a few, and then the link so that you can go there to pick a test for yourself. It is totally free to register, and get scores. Additional scores or expanded ones are available for a fee.

NOTE: (important) - If you click on "no thanks" on all the ad offers, the site will eventually get to your scores. It really is worth it for the hassle of going through the obligatory ad pages.

Here are some tests I have either taken myself or that look good for non-trads:

The Tickle IQ Test
Which Online University is Right for You?
Face Your Fears - What's holding you back?

Let me know how you like these!

How to begin...

This photo is by richard_b@morguefile.com. You can see all of his Morguefile (and free) photos here: Richard B's Morguefile photos


Non-traditional students can spend a long time THINKING about going back to school before they actually do it. I know I did, but I had an idea about what I was going to take in my mind already.

Through the years I spent raising my daughter, I used to wonder what my life would have been like if I had chosen to be a teacher instead of a typesetter/graphic artist.

Now I can see that both careers have their good and bad points. On the good side of teaching, there is the pay. And sometimes you reach a student or maybe even a few - - and can be a good influence on the future.

You can also do this by volunteering as a scout leader, however, or becoming a big brother or sister.

On the good side of my other career, typesetting and graphic arts, you do have some flexibility, depending on the job.

You get to work a shift, and not have to go home and work another shift of grading and planning. You get to sleep at night (usually) in the printing business, which is also a plus.

You can have great or not-so-great bosses, co-workers, working conditions, and decision-makers in a school OR in a factory. It all just depends on the place. And now I know.

I would not have known this about teaching, though, if I hadn't decided to become a non-traditional student, and go back to school. I would always have had a huge question mark about it.

So... for me, the beginning of MY decision to become a non-traditional student was sort of decided long ago, when I took my first education class at the age of 19. I wasn't able to finish my training then, but I always wanted to. When I decided to go back, it was an easy choice.

A REALLY BIG QUESTION
Some people have asked me, how does a non-traditional student begin? What should he or she do first?

I think that a non-traditional student should explore all his or her options before deciding to go back to school. If this means taking time off (if possible) or staying at the same job for a little bit longer, so be it.

There are so many school options today. Some jobs will pay for classes outside of work. Some SAY they will, but when you ask about it, they might inform you that they no longer offer that benefit. That happened to me. (So make sure to ask in person before deciding about that.)

Non-traditional students don't have to settle for night classes only, anymore. They can go to classes along with "traditional" students (during the day) and they can also take online classes.

PAYING FOR SCHOOL
Non-traditional students might find that they qualify for student loans and grants. They can go to the FAFSA site and fill out the online form. It takes awhile to do, but it's worth it.

SOME ADVICE: make sure you hit the "save" button every page you do. That way, if your computer freezes up, you don't have to redo everything. Also, have your tax and income information handy.

Hmmmm.... how do I know that? Because I had my computer freeze and had to completely redo mine. I also had to stop and find my tax information and that held things up.

FEDERAL OR STATE PROGRAMS
You may also want to check your local employment office to see if they offer any grants or training programs, especially if you were laid off from your job due to downsizing. It's worth a call or visit.

If you are considering going to trade school or to technical school, find out if the credits will transfer to other schools or universities. Some do, but some don't. It would be a shame to have to take a year or more of classes OVER just because the school you chose had credits that didn't transfer. I have a friend who had that happen to him.

Above all, don't let fear make your decision for you. Just because you might be an older student, or maybe have not been in school for awhile, that doesn't mean you can't learn something new. GOOD LUCK!

Registration Time!


It's that time again. Registration time. Luckily, students nowadays seldom must wait in lines and get signatures on cards to register like I used to when I first went to school. Most everything is now online, which makes it a lot easier.

Registering at the Last Minute
If you are like me, the first semester back at school means a lack of choice when it comes to classes. You are going to have to take what is left. Later on you can register earlier and get better time choices. Hopefully there will be classes to take if you register at the last minute. Make sure to talk to somebody at the college office before you register.

College Loans and your FAFSA
Make sure you have talked to the Student Loan office and filled out your FAFSA. You can fill it out now, but it takes several weeks sometimes for it to come back to the school. You will want your tax records from last year in order to put that information on the form.

IMPORTANT: Make sure you go to the CORRECT FAFSA SITE which is located at http://www.fafsa.ed.gov/

Make sure you check prerequisites for classes - what classes must you take before you can take the next one you need?

Your Professors:
If you are registering late (which means now) you may or may not have a choice of professor. But if you are curious, you can check out your professor at two check sites, ProfEval and PickAProf. The first one is better, but the second one does have how many A grades vs. F grades the professor gives, which can be handy to know.

The General Studies Degree
Sometimes you can get credit for college courses you have taken in the past, and don't have many left -- if you go for a semi-new General Studies Degree. I know that Western Kentucky Unversity offers this program. It's worth checking out.

For those who are registering now, more power to you. It takes a lot of guts to decide to go back to school. Now you are actually signing up. That is so great. You deserve to pat yourself on the back for really doing it instead of just thinking about it.