I find it terribly concerning that I'm paying $50k to go to a school to learn something I already know, and know well, to take classes on subjects somewhat connected to what I'll do in a future career, to get a job full of incompetent idiots who get the same paper as me.
Then why are you doing it? No one is forced to go to college. Nothing is stopping you from doing anything else.
If you want a "job" and a "career" working for someone else, then you probably will need a degree — there just isn't any way around that. You don't want to do it, but that's just what you will have to do because that is what is expected by the majority of people doing the hiring. Of course, if that's what you want, you should probably just get used to it because having a job means that someone else will be deciding what you do long after you are out of college.
If you want to chart your own course and be in control of what you pursue — then go do something on your own. Start something.
I wouldn't go to college with this mindset: "to learn something I already know". If you do, you won't learn anything, because you've already predisposed yourself against it. Go with an open mind. Look for opportunities. Collaborate with others. Find the best and the brightest — those in your class that are on your level — those that are ABOVE your level ... and learn from them, work on things with them, and learn everything you can not only about code, but people.
And never stop learning outside of your official classes. Keep pouring yourself into the things you love. Become an expert.
“I have never let my schooling interfere with my education.” ~ Mark Twain
Then why are you doing it? No one is forced to go to college. Nothing is stopping you from doing anything else.
If you want a "job" and a "career" working for someone else, then you probably will need a degree — there just isn't any way around that. You don't want to do it, but that's just what you will have to do because that is what is expected by the majority of people doing the hiring. Of course, if that's what you want, you should probably just get used to it because having a job means that someone else will be deciding what you do long after you are out of college.
If you want to chart your own course and be in control of what you pursue — then go do something on your own. Start something.
I wouldn't go to college with this mindset: "to learn something I already know". If you do, you won't learn anything, because you've already predisposed yourself against it. Go with an open mind. Look for opportunities. Collaborate with others. Find the best and the brightest — those in your class that are on your level — those that are ABOVE your level ... and learn from them, work on things with them, and learn everything you can not only about code, but people.
And never stop learning outside of your official classes. Keep pouring yourself into the things you love. Become an expert.
“I have never let my schooling interfere with my education.” ~ Mark Twain