University of Oregon’s graduation rate is 67 per 100, so going directly to university is more than four times as likely to succeed.
I strongly support the value of education to simply know things or learn new abilities. A networking class, an Art or electronics course, a literature course; all of value even absent a certificate. Although I have not located the reference, I think another Oregonian article states that 8 of 100 nontransfer certificate seekers gain a certificate.
Kudos to online reference finders.
“Oregon’s college completion rate is 15 percent for community college students, 54 percent for public four-year university students and 67 percent for students attending private four-year colleges, according to Complete College” http://www.oregonlive.com/education/index.ssf/2010/03/oregon_college_students_crash.html
University of Oregon’s graduation rate is 67 per 100, so going directly to university is more than four times as likely to succeed.
I strongly support the value of education to simply know things or learn new abilities. A networking class, an Art or electronics course, a literature course; all of value even absent a certificate. Although I have not located the reference, I think another Oregonian article states that 8 of 100 nontransfer certificate seekers gain a certificate.