My school:
I don't go to your average college.
Cal Maritime is part of the Cal State System and is one of the few Maritime Academies in the US. Located in Vallejo, CA it teaches young whippersnappers how to be maritime officers in the deck and engine department. Part of the curriculum includes 3 summer semesters at sea, kinda of like study abroad but with much more manual labor. Two of the those cruises are spent on the school ship The T.S. Golden Bear, which visits different parts of the world every summer. My major is Marine Engineering Technology, in April I will be getting my Bachelors of Science and Third Engineer Unlimited Coast Guard License to be an Officer.
The summer of your Junior year you go on Senior Cruise. I was at a fork in the road, I had to choose to either cruise with my friends and risk adding two more years onto my college experience or go to summer school and only ad a year. Realizing that having fun with friends isn't worth a full years tuition, I hit the books over summer.
The Home Stretch
I got my act together and finally got on track to graduate in the Spring of 2015. However, senior year was not all parties and kicking back. In January 2015, I took my licensing exam for my Third Engineer Unlimited License. It consists of seven tests (Motor I, Motor II, Steam I, Steam II, Electrical, Generals, and Safety) which are supposed to test all of the knowledge gained at school. In reality you learn it from a program like lapware, which is just another resource for mariners to get test prep. I managed to pass all 7 tests on my first try, this was a feat I did not expect to happen but it showed what I am capable of.
Right now I am in my last semester, just 25 more days to go until graduation. I don't have a concrete plan on what will happen after but I have a path. I received job offers from different companies, each has its perks and draw backs. I know there are thousands of grads right now hoping for one job offer, and i'm here stuck because I don't know which one to choose. I am spoiled in a sense, but I do not look at it that way. I chose to pursue a challenging degree in engineering and obtaining a license, now the hard work is being rewarded.