I have a senior who graduated from junior college. He just won't fall in love in college, and he won't go to, um, eat, drink and be merry. Instead, I am busy studying every day, taking all kinds of certificates and preparing for all kinds of exams every day. Go out to do part-time jobs as soon as you have time to keep yourself busy. Every time a friend plays games in the dormitory or sleeps at the same time, it is when he struggles to communicate in the library or other clubs outside. In college, interpersonal relationships are also very important.
University is a small society, so it is very important to get exercise in university, unlike those students who eat, drink and have fun in the dormitory. If a college student has been a salted fish in the dormitory for three years, then his ability after graduation is definitely far less than that of his struggling classmates. I know a senior whose salary is several times higher than that of many undergraduates. Because he worked hard in college, he worked hard after graduation, and the university also exercised his ability. Compared with his classmates, his ability is relatively high. Moreover, as a college graduate, his ability is not worse than that of undergraduates, but also better than many undergraduates. He is now highly valued by the company's leading bosses, and his salary is higher than that of many undergraduates.
If I start my own company and I am the boss, I won't be partial to people with bachelor degree or above, because they may have higher education, but their ability is not as good as that of junior college students. Nowadays, many enterprises and bosses are reluctant to find undergraduates, because they are impetuous in college, or think that they will have stable or stable high-paying jobs when they go to college, but some junior college students know that they have low academic qualifications. So I think the social prejudice against junior college students and undergraduates should be changed. It does not mean that junior college students are necessarily inferior to undergraduates.