Highlighting the point in the Q&A:
If you are having fun in HS or College, you don’t need to leave. Put that extra energy that could be going towards graduating early into a side project (learn plumbing, coding, carpentry, auto maintenance, socializing, networking, youtubeing, dating, writing, or anything else that will have long term value regardless of what your career happens to be).
I’m a big fan of “take community College courses, and have them count for HS credits and towards your associates/bachelors” if your HS allows it.
Highlighting the point in the Q&A: If you are having fun in HS or College, you don’t need to leave. Put that extra energy that could be going towards graduating early into a side project (learn plumbing, coding, carpentry, auto maintenance, socializing, networking, youtubeing, dating, writing, or anything else that will have long term value regardless of what your career happens to be).
I’m a big fan of “take community College courses, and have them count for HS credits and towards your associates/bachelors” if your HS allows it.