I saw a news report about 2 people who robbed 10,000 dollars worth of course books from a university's library. I just hope they returned those 2 books.
As a middle aged Canadian, I can confidently say we don NOT use these terms interchangeably. College is Vocational Training. You go to college to get specific training for a job. University is held in higher regard. University teaches you to think critically. What you do with that skill is up to you.
One huge difference that you missed is that universities tend to focus on research ("publish or perish") while colleges tend to focus on teaching. One result of this is while college classes tend to be smaller and taught by an "instructor" with years of experience teaching, university undergraduate classes tend to huge (200+) lead by a professor with little or no interest in undergraduate courses with much (if not most) of the teaching being done by graduate teaching assistants with no training in teaching.
College is more specific I always thought. There are many universities and some of them are divided into colleges such as college of business, college of nursing, so on and so on
As a general rule guys. Community colleges are for 2 years and you can finish in another 2 years in University to get a bachelor. University are 4+ years however college can be substituted for 2 years. These univ colleges are not community colleges. Community college was 1/6 the price with better education IMO than University first 2 years. I'd suggest community college than University... Unless you are fully paid to go to university. Ive finished graduate school and honestly liked community college more. Cheers.
Damn True. Community College 2 years >> University first 2 years. Better Education, fun and cheaper too. I was gonna join university directly but someone suggested me and I did some research as well.
Collège = middle school/junior high Grande école = college Lycée = high school Université = umiversity. Note that "grande école" literally translates to "high school", just to add a bit more confusion.
Here in Canada, school is vastly different from the U.S and what this video said about it being similar to the U.K. At 17/18 you graduate high school and usually would have already applied to a post-secondary institution about a year before you actually start. For most programs, getting in is based on your grades and classes you took in high school (i.e you need a C-college or U-uni level high school course such as English or biology to get into the corresponding institution) so you need to make up your mind about the type of career you want, early high school in order to gain these credits. University is more for academic/STEM types of careers, while college is more "hands on". Here, college can have trades programs and/or have programs intertwined with a local university, so you can be taking classes at a college and a university (or do 2 years at one and 2 at another). As for jobs, well personally most jobs i've been seeking out require a 2 or 3-year college degree for an entry-level graphic designer job (and there are plenty available, many with starting salaries double than what i paid for tuition, which was technically free since i'm low income) My full 3 year tuition is about $15,000. And that's one of the more expensive programs my school offers, many are just under $10,000 for 2 years. In college, you can get a diploma or advanced diploma. In university, you can get an undergrad degree, bachelors, ect. it all depends on the type of job you want in life, he skills you currently have & if you're prepared to enter that job.
Tuition cost is a HUGE difference! Example: My first semester was in the fall of 1999. (Yes, I'm old.) The private university I had wanted to attend was charging around $250 per credit hour. The branch campus of the junior college I ended up attending was a little less than $80 per credit hour. Also, I later found out that a lot of the instructors I had at the junior college also taught the exact same classes at the larger universities in the area. So, at least with a couple of my classes, I got a private university quality education at a community college price. Also, not only do colleges have smaller student bodies than larger universities, but the classes themselves are also smaller. At the junior college, my largest class had 40 students. My smallest class had maybe 5 students. When I transferred to a small university, all of my classes had around 35 students. And, my friends at the private university I had originally wanted to attend said some of their classes could have 80 students or more. In smaller classes, the instructors can work with each individual student to make sure they learn and understand the material. In the really large classes, I've been told that the instructors will never even acknowledge your existence. They come in, they lecture, and then they leave. Homework and exams are handled by teaching assistants. And, if you need help with the material, you'll just have to find a tutor or join a study group.
In Scotland our educational system is different from England's. We just finish highschool at the age of 16-18 (Your allowed to leave high school at 16). Then after high school we can go into higher education like collage or uni. Good thing is we dont have to pay a single penny to go to collage or uni.
Latin Ace The Infographics Show This Channel *MAY* do a video on that suggested topic, Although most likely you're better off asking Adam Conover from Adam ruins Everything series on RUclips to make a video about that. ℹ 😀 👍 🏣 🏛 💰⁉️
I was given some great advice when choosing what college or university I want to go to. In general, all universities and colleges are the same, you get the same teachings as you would get in any other institution. What differentiates is the reputation, Harvard is known to be the best of the best, while in New York City (which is known for its CUNY system) a notable college is Hunter College. Also, students would go to a university in order to get the full "college life", however colleges do offer the same thing.
In Zimbabwe A college is synonymous with Highschool. They offer (2 years) Advanced Level and (4years) Odinary Level certificates for the most part. Both certificates are high school certificates offered to Kids between 13 and 18 years usually Universities offer 4year undergraduate Degree's and 2-5years Post graduate degree's Masters, PHD etc and Universities are 50 - 100 times larger than colleges. We have Polytechnics that offer Diplomas and certificates in 2- 4years
There's also Vocational College and Apprentice Programs --- which lead to careers in trades. Going rate for most independent contractor tradesman is 100k-300k a year or 50-150 an hour. Examples - plumbing, electric, hvac, elevators, car mechanics, pipefitters, steel workers...
In my country if you want to do something with psychology you can either go to College: learning applied psychology (3 years) for a bachelor. (After you are a psychologist consultant) Or go to University: learning psychology (5 years) for a master (after that you are an psychologists)
In the UK, you go to school till year 11- get your GCSE's. Than go to sixth form college (2 years)- get your A level's than finally go to university to get your undergraduate degree or masters.
What are you on? The statement is true. "They prepare students to earn degrees later" - A-levels and level 3 diplomas are what are needed to attend university and this is exactly what colleges and 6th forms do in the UK. Colleges can even provide HNC and HNDs, not just A-levels and BTEC vocational diplomas. What part did he get wrong? College is literally pre-university.
KnexKingGamer he got wrong that he said there are no defined differences between the two but that it’s just a trend, implying that you could study a degree at a college, which you cannot
I tour 2 universities and its very big and spaced out so it feels very impersonal and easy to blend in the background with so many students . I also toured 3 community colleges , and they feel big enough to where you have space but small enough to where you can be recognized and given proper credit/recognition.
As a junior in high school I appreciate this video a lot. Looked it up on google once but the answer wasn’t clear and ended up just discarding it. As I got mail I noticed Universities are larger. Thanks for the video!
If one wants to save some money, start with a community college. Do well and earn scores. Continue at a university that has a good qs world ranking within your level, if you want to go to a top university with low acceptance rate, enroll in their preparation year program. It is like a ticket to get into that college. Or find the easiest program to get into, especially if you’re confused with which program to choose and have no clear goal.
Some universities here in philippines have pre-school, elementary, high school, then college (can be undergrad or grad). I graduated senior high in a university. I've always thought that's how universities work, until I entered the internet 😂
In the UK, School is until 16 years old, College (or Sixth-form College) is 16 to 18, and university comes after. The terms are not interchangeable, although schools commonly have a sixth-form colleges attached. In the UK, liberal-arts colleges don't exist nor do Associates Degrees, Bachelors Degrees are only three years because you pick your subject (major) from day one. At university In UK one doesn't use the word "Professor" either calling them "Lecturers" or "Dr". Likewise, you attend "lectures" and not "class" at university, but attend "lessons" at school and sixth-form college taught by "teachers." One "studies" subjects at school and sixth-form college, but "reads" a subject at a university. Doing my masters in Canada, I would disagree with the video, people do use the terms interchangeably -- weirdly, I've gone back to "school."
You forgot to mention that in the United States there are also Art Colleges for study in painting, drawing, animation, photography and film as well as technical colleges that offer study in welding, HVAC, refrigeration, and nursing. Art colleges can offer a Bachelor’s of Fine Arts and Associate’s Degrees. Technical colleges offer Associate’s Degrees and Certificates.
I just finished trade school to be an electrician. I have numerous jobs to choose from at a decent pay. And I won’t be in crippling debt either. The beauty is, I go to my buddies frat parties on the weekends, and I don’t have to pay for it lol
And the best part is unless you do a STEM degree, go do something medical, or become an engineer of sorts there's zero reason to go to college because it's not as valued anymore. There's nothing I can't learn without a massive loan online for free or near free combined with the real work experience every fucking degree ever lacks, which is why you're overlooked. lol
but that's the thing - you CAN learn all that online but will you? how do you know if you're actually grasping the information? I went to school for photography before taking graphic design and i said the same thing before going to school. I tried for TEN YEARS to teach myself and develop my skill... i payed about $10,000, got brand new equipment i got to keep, was able to use a studio with expensive equipment and props i'll never own, i was pushed to learn about the basics of photography (i.e broad v.s short lighting - lighting a headshot PROPERLY, lighting large and small products properly to the standard of professionals, heck we even had a business class) My skills went from teenager with a DSLR to a professional with literally 50 weeks of instruction. Sometimes, schools are a waste of money. There are a lot of people who will go to university for things they can easily go to college for... but going to school is so much different than teaching yourself. If you can work your skills up to a professional level from the comfort of your computer with zero peers to learn from, cudos to you. but that's not something everyone should aspire to do. The internet is full of misinformation and crappy advice. Websites like skillshare are great, but college is supposed to help prepare you for the workforce, not JUST working on your skills in that field.
In my home area in Europe there is a clear legal difference: Universities can award PhD level degrees, Colleges can't. Interesting to see that this is different in almost every country.
so basically college is affordable and universities are expensive. However, you get a lot of "job opportunities" when you graduate from university. But do college students graduate in certificate programs though?
In Canada we do not use University to describe ALL further education, there is a CLEAR distinction between the 2 and every student will make it clear that there is a difference..... If you talk to people from the U.S. A lot of them call all higher education 'College' (unless it's like Harvard) which is strange to us here in Canada. Pretty much if you go to College for a Trade here in Canada, you will actually get a good paying job $25+ first 2 years, then goes to like $40+... If you go to University, you get 40k debt, and no job.... The thing is, nobody wants to go to College here in Canada, it is almost looked down upon.
In Canada college trains for specific jobs and university educates for like an English major College would teach massage graphic design fashion University would be medicine English teaching etc
I don’t know about America but in England we don’t pay for the college. If you are over certain age you have to pay but the government gives you like funding
Hey..i am a international student..i'm from bangladesh..and i want to study in a medical school..i pass class 12..now what should do for study in a medical school..if you know plz suggest me...
In Canada (at least in the place I live in), college is usually for the more “odd”jobs such as electrical engenreioning, mechanical engineering and nursing while university is for higher-paying jobs like medicine and law.
And that is the reason why people need to study in fields in which there are always career options. I am studying to be a nurse with the population growing older, more hospitals and research teams (apparently nurses work on those too I had no idea). I can say that I am coming out with a really nice piece of paper. Thank you College for being cheap and giving me such a great career to look for.
Here in the Philippines, Colleges & University are different, in colleges only offer few degress while the university offer a lot of undergraduate degrees. Colleges👉 (private) University 👉(public) .That's it.
*Education is a lucrative business* You missed the most important difference btwn a College and a University: tuition. There is a big difference btwn paying right of the bat for a four year degree at a University rather than transferring from a two year degree to a four. The tuition difference is staggering but the level of education is negligible. Students and parents can save a thousands of dollars by doing this. But Universities will never recommend this because in the en Education is a business.
Omg, I just moved into my dorm at Harvard earlier today and I’m just sitting in my bed watching RUclips and I just realized that Harvard is called “Harvard College”, not “Harvard University” 😂
In Canada it's almost always: College == trades, 2 year degrees, certificate. Get straight to work, it's much more focused, and cheaper tuition per semester. University == bachelors/masters/doctorates. More expensive, but has access to better facilities, and offers dorms, etc. I think this makes plenty of sense. Most see University as something 'better' but it depends on how fast you want to get into the workforce, and with how much debt, as well as what field you want to work.
University and college are two different things in Canada. Colleges are trades and practice focussed while University is study and lecture based. The degrees are different so the two terms aren't the same what soever. I feel like I've made a few comments about your errors with Canadian systems
What was the best thing about the college/university you attended?
What's with the bizarrely intense music?
Why does this only have 12 likes on my screen??
leaving
@@DennisDayToday 😂
Definitely university
But they have similarities, *student loans*
Today I learned that the US student loans has reached 3 trillion dollars.
And I still can't believe that 2 students only are in debts.
Damn I felt that you don’t even know
Well, not in germany
And socialist zombies with safe spaces. Meanwhile my safe space at my university was my bed room, bathroom, and cafe.
Of course, bc Student Loans (financial aid)is given to any qualified school, including trade and online schools in the U.S.
College= School. University = Many Schools within a school.
That definition fits the UK universities.
Except for places like Dartmouth College.. which is really a University by that definition, but is still named College.
It actually applies to India (with exceptions of course)
that definition also fits the Philippines uni
Hahaha indeed. In our university there is alot of school from grade school to college. 😂
What kind of sick joke is this.. This needs the age restriction filters on it. School is awful and very innapropriate. Im truly offended
ok
Ok.
ok
I'm missing the joke unfortunately 😢
Ok
I saw a news report about 2 people who robbed 10,000 dollars worth of course books from a university's library.
I just hope they returned those 2 books.
What
Did you not get the joke?
*OOF*
At first i didn't get it but then... *I REALIZED*
No I didnt
_Please don't make videos on very dark and negative topic like this_
U drunk bro?
ROCKY. C. S no, he just finds this topic really not fun and sarcastically remarks it as very dark .
@@rocky.c.s r/wooosh
What do you want to refer about
" very dark" sorry i am beginner in english.
loc dog he’s making a joke
I’ve always thought they were the same lol
College is 2 year.
Univ is 2+ year
same
chrisnosavage doesn’t matter, A students work for C students so school doesn’t matter. It’s all about business which r C students
yea but the A students are the only ones who bring progression and advancement in society
The Notorious business runs the world, makes sense
So basically,
*university > college*
aurel In France à university contains multiple college, “facs”
Mapa de ribersade
University is a scam 😂
Thx
@Ally Lean S U R E, buddy, how about u try going to one urself, then talk
community college makes you seem broke when in reality you’re less broke
As a middle aged Canadian, I can confidently say we don NOT use these terms interchangeably. College is Vocational Training. You go to college to get specific training for a job. University is held in higher regard. University teaches you to think critically. What you do with that skill is up to you.
Dramatic music for a dark topic. Quite fitting.
hahaha... 😀
Either way you still end up with 100k Student Debt and no Job!
Wild Pear fr. Waste of time and money
Speak for yourself, I go to Community College and have 0 debt thanks to scholarships.
Unless you live in the UK hehe
Wakaziar community college is like high school 2.
Not if you join the national guard/reserve
One huge difference that you missed is that universities tend to focus on research ("publish or perish") while colleges tend to focus on teaching. One result of this is while college classes tend to be smaller and taught by an "instructor" with years of experience teaching, university undergraduate classes tend to huge (200+) lead by a professor with little or no interest in undergraduate courses with much (if not most) of the teaching being done by graduate teaching assistants with no training in teaching.
2:32!
Thank you. This is the kind of advice I need. Do you have any more?
I always always thought collage was the cheaper version of a university;-;
Yep. I like college alot.
MS in two program and... You were spending 1/6 of univ prices.
;_;
collages are much cheaper and also fun to make
I like collages more than universities.
College is more specific I always thought. There are many universities and some of them are divided into colleges such as college of business, college of nursing, so on and so on
As a general rule guys.
Community colleges are for 2 years and you can finish in another 2 years in University to get a bachelor.
University are 4+ years however college can be substituted for 2 years.
These univ colleges are not community colleges.
Community college was 1/6 the price with better education IMO than University first 2 years.
I'd suggest community college than University... Unless you are fully paid to go to university. Ive finished graduate school and honestly liked community college more.
Cheers.
Thanks! Using Community College as my stepping stone starting tommorow :)
@@InvalidPersistentName All the best!
Damn True. Community College 2 years >> University first 2 years. Better Education, fun and cheaper too. I was gonna join university directly but someone suggested me and I did some research as well.
Ishan Wish for the best!
Forte Astro did your credits transfer? Because I'm worried about when i finish high school i want my credits to transfer from college to university
Universities are generally more expensive than colleges. You can get a good or bad education regardless where you go.
There you go, give me a 👍
In French "collège" is I believe what people from the US call middle school.
So secondary school??
(England)
It would be high school in America. We have elementary, middle school, high school, college
Well nope
And some places say Junior High instead of Middle School.
Collège = middle school/junior high
Grande école = college
Lycée = high school
Université = umiversity.
Note that "grande école" literally translates to "high school", just to add a bit more confusion.
Here in Canada, school is vastly different from the U.S and what this video said about it being similar to the U.K. At 17/18 you graduate high school and usually would have already applied to a post-secondary institution about a year before you actually start. For most programs, getting in is based on your grades and classes you took in high school (i.e you need a C-college or U-uni level high school course such as English or biology to get into the corresponding institution) so you need to make up your mind about the type of career you want, early high school in order to gain these credits.
University is more for academic/STEM types of careers, while college is more "hands on". Here, college can have trades programs and/or have programs intertwined with a local university, so you can be taking classes at a college and a university (or do 2 years at one and 2 at another). As for jobs, well personally most jobs i've been seeking out require a 2 or 3-year college degree for an entry-level graphic designer job (and there are plenty available, many with starting salaries double than what i paid for tuition, which was technically free since i'm low income)
My full 3 year tuition is about $15,000. And that's one of the more expensive programs my school offers, many are just under $10,000 for 2 years.
In college, you can get a diploma or advanced diploma. In university, you can get an undergrad degree, bachelors, ect.
it all depends on the type of job you want in life, he skills you currently have & if you're prepared to enter that job.
Tuition cost is a HUGE difference! Example: My first semester was in the fall of 1999. (Yes, I'm old.) The private university I had wanted to attend was charging around $250 per credit hour. The branch campus of the junior college I ended up attending was a little less than $80 per credit hour. Also, I later found out that a lot of the instructors I had at the junior college also taught the exact same classes at the larger universities in the area. So, at least with a couple of my classes, I got a private university quality education at a community college price.
Also, not only do colleges have smaller student bodies than larger universities, but the classes themselves are also smaller. At the junior college, my largest class had 40 students. My smallest class had maybe 5 students. When I transferred to a small university, all of my classes had around 35 students. And, my friends at the private university I had originally wanted to attend said some of their classes could have 80 students or more. In smaller classes, the instructors can work with each individual student to make sure they learn and understand the material. In the really large classes, I've been told that the instructors will never even acknowledge your existence. They come in, they lecture, and then they leave. Homework and exams are handled by teaching assistants. And, if you need help with the material, you'll just have to find a tutor or join a study group.
In Scotland our educational system is different from England's. We just finish highschool at the age of 16-18 (Your allowed to leave high school at 16). Then after high school we can go into higher education like collage or uni. Good thing is we dont have to pay a single penny to go to collage or uni.
Ahaha I was looking for a Scottish comment to see if I should or shouldn't bother saying that we're different 😂
I’m planning on going to college after high school, it’s my senior year, wish me luck 😄
You're wasting your time and money.
@@theeasybeginning664 At least he's not a junkie.
Same here. Good luck!
Toast & Soup thank you so much and now I’m wasting my time and money, I think getting a education is important you think
Cameron Cole thank you so much 😄
In Sweden, we call collages ”hög skola” which translates to high school... and what you call high school we call “gymnasium”.
Please mKe a video of why university cost an arm and a leg
Latin Ace The Infographics Show This Channel *MAY* do a video on that suggested topic, Although most likely you're better off asking Adam Conover from Adam ruins Everything series on RUclips to make a video about that. ℹ 😀 👍 🏣 🏛 💰⁉️
It might also cost a duck and a vagina.
Because money.
Because they love money
Thanks for making this video as I’m applying to university, it’s been a big help.
I'm glad it helped you!
I thought this was Bright Side for a second
Prydwen bright side sucks
nah this is much better
I miss the original voice.
Has it changed permanently?
@@GobsAlmightyVlogs no
@@GobsAlmightyVlogs they interchange between videos
He died
@@itslael472 no he didn't.
He got ligma but is still alive
I was given some great advice when choosing what college or university I want to go to. In general, all universities and colleges are the same, you get the same teachings as you would get in any other institution. What differentiates is the reputation, Harvard is known to be the best of the best, while in New York City (which is known for its CUNY system) a notable college is Hunter College. Also, students would go to a university in order to get the full "college life", however colleges do offer the same thing.
In Zimbabwe
A college is synonymous with Highschool. They offer (2 years) Advanced Level and (4years) Odinary Level certificates for the most part. Both certificates are high school certificates offered to Kids between 13 and 18 years usually
Universities offer 4year undergraduate Degree's and 2-5years Post graduate degree's Masters, PHD etc and Universities are 50 - 100 times larger than colleges.
We have Polytechnics that offer Diplomas and certificates in 2- 4years
I heard that Mugabe made it possible for people with PhD's to be jobless.
Oml thank u so much for clearing this out for me😌, i was always so confused about the difference of both or if they were even the same thing😃
You're welcome!
@@TheInfographicsShow omg thank you so much for seeing my comment, but i seriously do appreciate you clarifying this for me and others😃☺
I thought “university” just meant it has Dorm rooms, and colleges don’t.
Everyone: complains about how much they both cost
Me: *Laughs in UK*
Can you tell me if its really that terrifying. I have some thoughts on moving to uk and now Im scared 😭
There's also Vocational College and Apprentice Programs --- which lead to careers in trades. Going rate for most independent contractor tradesman is 100k-300k a year or 50-150 an hour. Examples - plumbing, electric, hvac, elevators, car mechanics, pipefitters, steel workers...
In Spanish countries we only used university
Don't you mean latin american countries? Solo hay una España wey.
Toast & Soup Don't you mean the entire world except the US?
@@ramon475 Doesn't the U.K use the term "college" too?
Dolapo Bolinda Indeed
@Dolapo Bolinda I learn something new everyday.
You guys just made a video about enrollment and salary of university and college ! I was not expecting that.
I knew they were different and you did a fantastic job at highlighting the differences.
In my country if you want to do something with psychology you can either go to
College: learning applied psychology (3 years) for a bachelor. (After you are a psychologist consultant)
Or go to
University: learning psychology (5 years) for a master (after that you are an psychologists)
Why is the music so dramatic, it makes the video hard to relax to and leave on in the background
In the UK, you go to school till year 11- get your GCSE's. Than go to sixth form college (2 years)- get your A level's than finally go to university to get your undergraduate degree or masters.
That statement about the Uk is flat out false, College in Uk is 16-18 and study A levels, and Uni is 18+ and achieve degrees
JoeChristianVEVO Canada is wrong too
Here graduating university gets you a degrees and college gets diplomas which are more job specific
What are you on? The statement is true.
"They prepare students to earn degrees later" - A-levels and level 3 diplomas are what are needed to attend university and this is exactly what colleges and 6th forms do in the UK. Colleges can even provide HNC and HNDs, not just A-levels and BTEC vocational diplomas.
What part did he get wrong? College is literally pre-university.
KnexKingGamer he got wrong that he said there are no defined differences between the two but that it’s just a trend, implying that you could study a degree at a college, which you cannot
every collage in Scotland provide HNC and HNDs as they are Scottish qualifications
Collages in Scotland is different from England.
In Turkish, 'üniversite' is the university we know, while the word 'kolej' is used to describe private schools.
I tour 2 universities and its very big and spaced out so it feels very impersonal and easy to blend in the background with so many students .
I also toured 3 community colleges , and they feel big enough to where you have space but small enough to where you can be recognized and given proper credit/recognition.
it makes me feel better that people also thought they were the same.
As a junior in high school I appreciate this video a lot. Looked it up on google once but the answer wasn’t clear and ended up just discarding it. As I got mail I noticed Universities are larger. Thanks for the video!
If one wants to save some money, start with a community college. Do well and earn scores. Continue at a university that has a good qs world ranking within your level, if you want to go to a top university with low acceptance rate, enroll in their preparation year program. It is like a ticket to get into that college. Or find the easiest program to get into, especially if you’re confused with which program to choose and have no clear goal.
Some universities here in philippines have pre-school, elementary, high school, then college (can be undergrad or grad). I graduated senior high in a university. I've always thought that's how universities work, until I entered the internet 😂
I never went to college nor university I just graduated from highschool and then start working.
In the UK, School is until 16 years old, College (or Sixth-form College) is 16 to 18, and university comes after. The terms are not interchangeable, although schools commonly have a sixth-form colleges attached. In the UK, liberal-arts colleges don't exist nor do Associates Degrees, Bachelors Degrees are only three years because you pick your subject (major) from day one.
At university In UK one doesn't use the word "Professor" either calling them "Lecturers" or "Dr". Likewise, you attend "lectures" and not "class" at university, but attend "lessons" at school and sixth-form college taught by "teachers." One "studies" subjects at school and sixth-form college, but "reads" a subject at a university.
Doing my masters in Canada, I would disagree with the video, people do use the terms interchangeably -- weirdly, I've gone back to "school."
You forgot to mention that in the United States there are also Art Colleges for study in painting, drawing, animation, photography and film as well as technical colleges that offer study in welding, HVAC, refrigeration, and nursing. Art colleges can offer a Bachelor’s of Fine Arts and Associate’s Degrees. Technical colleges offer Associate’s Degrees and Certificates.
I just finished trade school to be an electrician. I have numerous jobs to choose from at a decent pay. And I won’t be in crippling debt either. The beauty is, I go to my buddies frat parties on the weekends, and I don’t have to pay for it lol
So you went to a college.
cloutchristi yep. technical college
@@beefchillingham6790 good for you man
Good for you 😄
Tyler Johnson Great.
Universities in the United States just seem to be a collection of smaller colleges intertwined
I’ll tell u what’s the same, your throwing your money away for a piece of paper that says your a good drone.
One big mac please
I'd rather be a drone than a junkie.
I mean...At least they teach you the difference between your and you're...
Bobby Johnson Esq. u don’t know what I do lol what makes u think I shoot up drugs?
Bolmer would you like fries and a drink with that?
I love watching this channel on long car rides or while eating. Very interesting.
And the best part is unless you do a STEM degree, go do something medical, or become an engineer of sorts there's zero reason to go to college because it's not as valued anymore. There's nothing I can't learn without a massive loan online for free or near free combined with the real work experience every fucking degree ever lacks, which is why you're overlooked. lol
The catch is a lot of companies don't even want to train you unless you have a degree.
but that's the thing - you CAN learn all that online but will you? how do you know if you're actually grasping the information? I went to school for photography before taking graphic design and i said the same thing before going to school. I tried for TEN YEARS to teach myself and develop my skill... i payed about $10,000, got brand new equipment i got to keep, was able to use a studio with expensive equipment and props i'll never own, i was pushed to learn about the basics of photography (i.e broad v.s short lighting - lighting a headshot PROPERLY, lighting large and small products properly to the standard of professionals, heck we even had a business class) My skills went from teenager with a DSLR to a professional with literally 50 weeks of instruction. Sometimes, schools are a waste of money. There are a lot of people who will go to university for things they can easily go to college for... but going to school is so much different than teaching yourself. If you can work your skills up to a professional level from the comfort of your computer with zero peers to learn from, cudos to you. but that's not something everyone should aspire to do. The internet is full of misinformation and crappy advice. Websites like skillshare are great, but college is supposed to help prepare you for the workforce, not JUST working on your skills in that field.
The way I see it, a university can have multiple colleges.
In my home area in Europe there is a clear legal difference: Universities can award PhD level degrees, Colleges can't. Interesting to see that this is different in almost every country.
Anybody else craving serial killer vids?
Me 🙋🏾♀️
so basically college is affordable and universities are expensive. However, you get a lot of "job opportunities" when you graduate from university. But do college students graduate in certificate programs though?
QUICK ANSWER : NO ONE KNOW'S THE DIFFERENCE
This was super informational. Thanks.
This dramatic music
In Canada we do not use University to describe ALL further education, there is a CLEAR distinction between the 2 and every student will make it clear that there is a difference..... If you talk to people from the U.S. A lot of them call all higher education 'College' (unless it's like Harvard) which is strange to us here in Canada. Pretty much if you go to College for a Trade here in Canada, you will actually get a good paying job $25+ first 2 years, then goes to like $40+... If you go to University, you get 40k debt, and no job.... The thing is, nobody wants to go to College here in Canada, it is almost looked down upon.
Community College 2 years
University 4 years
You're welcome
@banana aya playa
Gosh you dam Canadians 🙄
not true
Not the case in Latin America. My career lasts 7 years.
only community colleges are 2 years. Some colleges are still 4 years and give bachelor degree
@@yanwinaung8111
It's weird around here😐 I guess it differs
You guys should do a breakdown video on "what if all of the states fought a war against each other."
college vs univirsity at 0:37
reads title university vs college
Thank you i be waiting for a videos like this.
School is starting tomorrow...
Kill me!!!
Saaammmee
I started 4 weeks ago, lol.
Toast & Soup Lucky you.
Lonely Gamer I know. Time kinda moves fast.
@@asielmilian38 We'll be old men before you know it.
In Canada college trains for specific jobs and university educates for like an English major
College would teach massage graphic design fashion
University would be medicine English teaching etc
One starts with "U", the other one with "C", bye. 😎✌❤
@The JayJay clearly u went there
@The JayJay oh so ur still in highschool then
@The JayJay why did u delete all ur comments
Question it might sound dumb but is it ok to go to university first and than college?
Trying to think of a comment to get likes before the other comments get here
I don’t know about America but in England we don’t pay for the college. If you are over certain age you have to pay but the government gives you like funding
I was not ready for this depressing 🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥
I am bound to start the first two years off at a community college. Which is better? Community, university, online college?
*Oxford vs Cambridge*
massachusetts institue of technology vs stanford university aaaa
LOVE these vids!!!!!
Thank you very much!
And they both make you bankrupt
5:28 I don't understand what that has got to do with anything? Are you comparing Unversities with Colleges or private with public Colleges?
University is too expensive for me.
I going to a community college when I’m finish high school.
Hey..i am a international student..i'm from bangladesh..and i want to study in a medical school..i pass class 12..now what should do for study in a medical school..if you know plz suggest me...
Thanks for this vedio i been wanting it from ages
In Canada (at least in the place I live in), college is usually for the more “odd”jobs such as electrical engenreioning, mechanical engineering and nursing while university is for higher-paying jobs like medicine and law.
In New Zealand, collage is what a lot of people call High school and university is higher education.
Which one gives a better degrees?
Of course University
My understanding has always been Colleges in general are smaller. And a University may contain multiple colleges.
Tomorrow there is school 😀
Great video 💯🙂
University > Collage
College*
Spelling Class>University>College
His voice is so much better than the other guy
college and Uni aka drown in debt and lose 5 years of your life for a piece of paper that could or not get you the job.
And that is the reason why people need to study in fields in which there are always career options. I am studying to be a nurse with the population growing older, more hospitals and research teams (apparently nurses work on those too I had no idea). I can say that I am coming out with a really nice piece of paper. Thank you College for being cheap and giving me such a great career to look for.
Here in the Philippines, Colleges & University are different, in colleges only offer few degress while the university offer a lot of undergraduate degrees. Colleges👉 (private) University 👉(public) .That's it.
They have many Private University in the Philippines, in public it called State University.
please....use the original voice....don’t like this one
I LOVE YOUR CHANNEL
ok, this is epic
God Shapiro 😇👌🏼💪🏻
*Education is a lucrative business*
You missed the most important difference btwn a College and a University: tuition. There is a big difference btwn paying right of the bat for a four year degree at a University rather than transferring from a two year degree to a four.
The tuition difference is staggering but the level of education is negligible. Students and parents can save a thousands of dollars by doing this. But Universities will never recommend this because in the en Education is a business.
I hate school like if u agree
School is good.
Toast & Soup yeah
Toast & Soup School is not great or bad, It's kinda good.
@@asielmilian38 I kinda enjoy more being at school than being at home, yeah it's good.
School is great
University is love, university is life.
Omg, I just moved into my dorm at Harvard earlier today and I’m just sitting in my bed watching RUclips and I just realized that Harvard is called “Harvard College”, not “Harvard University” 😂
Congrats for getting into harvard
Hahaha lol me too!! Just typing this from my office at NASA
Lel same!! Just typing this from the moon
Lol typing this from the Congo wait noooo!!!
OMG SAME!!! I just got into area 51!
Needed this understanding
This is America
Yep its pretty nice here
Chyna
nine tail Yup. America's education is not good and it leads alot of students in debt.
Asiel MILIAN it is outside of poor ghettos
In Canada it's almost always:
College == trades, 2 year degrees, certificate. Get straight to work, it's much more focused, and cheaper tuition per semester.
University == bachelors/masters/doctorates. More expensive, but has access to better facilities, and offers dorms, etc.
I think this makes plenty of sense. Most see University as something 'better' but it depends on how fast you want to get into the workforce, and with how much debt, as well as what field you want to work.
University and college are two different things in Canada. Colleges are trades and practice focussed while University is study and lecture based. The degrees are different so the two terms aren't the same what soever. I feel like I've made a few comments about your errors with Canadian systems