Lynn O'Shaughnessy

The College Solution

How I Graduated From Berkeley in Two Years

By Lynn O'Shaughnessy | Aug 11, 2009 |

Hardly anyone graduates from college in four years anymore. Just 28% of students manage to earn a college degree from state universities in the traditional time.

So it was a stunning feat when Angelica Kalika earned a bachelor degree in just two years. She wrote about how she pulled this off in her new book, How I Graduated from Berkeley in Two Years.

Most students aren’t going to be in such a rush, but Kalika’s experience at UC Berkeley could help mere mortals who want to earn a bachelor’s degree in the normal eight semesters.

Why sprint through school? Kalika and her mother, who is a hairdresser in Los Angeles, couldn’t afford Berkeley’s $80,000+ price tag.  Kalika, who is contemplating getting an MBA, slashed the price in half. FYI, 61% of students at Berkeley graduate in four years.

Here are some of Kalika’s tips:

Read the catalogue. Students don’t spend much time looking at  catalogues, but they are an invaluable source of information. At UC Berkeley, for instance, students must take a class that meets an American culture requirement, but those classes fill up fast. By closely reading the catalogue, Kalika found an English and history class that met the requirement, which most students overlooked.

Get everything in writing. Requirements for a major tend to change and Kalika couldn’t afford to take a class that wouldn’t get her closer to her degree. Consequently, before she signed up for classes, she had someone in her department send her an email confirming that the course would fulfill a requirement in her major, which was psychology. “If you don’t get things in writing,” she says, “you don’t have anything.”

Take summer classes. This will sound insane, but Kalika took seven classes in her last summer at Berkeley. A couple of advisors refused to sign off on her schedule, but she found a compassionate counselor, who fed squirrels nuts on her ledge (True story!), who believed Kalika when she insisted that she could handle the work load. Summer classes, Kalika observes, are far less stressful than during the regular school year and aren’t as tough to get into.

Take extension classes. Kalika took some extension classes at UC Berkeley, which she said were easier and more laid back. In advance, she made sure the credits would transfer.

Skip studying aboard. Kalika told me that she considers these programs the “biggest waste of time.” It’s great to see the world, but she says it’s rare that these overseas classes will help you fulfill the requirements for your major. Instead she suggests graduating early and spending some of the money you saved on a great vacation.

 
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    1

    crondanet5

    08/12/09 | Report as spam

    Message has been deleted.

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    2

    crondanet5

    08/12/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How I Graduated From Berkeley in Two Years

    Golly day, it worked, the web site accepted me. The key is summer classes. My daughter completed 4 years in 3 using them, and switched from a community college to a university in the process. Take 4 summer classes each Summer if you can. That is a semester. Ensure all classes count toward graduation requirements of college. Start college summer school the Spring/Summer you graduate high school. That way when you go to college in the Fall you are a second semester freshman. The courses add up quickly that way. She would be wise to get an MBA and a second masters now. Experience doesn't matter, education level does. Ann Anastasia, a pioneer in measuring the intellectual differences between people stated: "Intelligent people tend to stay in school longer." Don't use Gates as an argument, research the family he came from and how he assembled his team to create Microsoft. Then you can see why his timing was perfect. I'm pleased someone else discovered this method to reduce time spent at the bachelor level. The professors get so much more interesting at the master's and doctoral.

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    3

    nbh222

    08/14/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How I Graduated From Berkeley in Two Years

    I have one child in college and two more coming up soon (twins). They are all great students and hard workers and want to go to high end colleges. Yikes. I just ordered Kalika's Berkeley in two years book, I like this idea a lot. This could be the only way I can afford to send these three great kids to good schools like they deserve.

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    4

    nbh222

    08/14/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How I Graduated From Berkeley in Two Years

    I was so interested to read this article, and I just bought Kalika's book online about graduating so quickly from Berkeley, I have one son in college and two coming up. They are all smart and hard working and I would love to be able to send them to a top notch colleges, but I can't imagine being able to afford it. This may be the answer. Thank you Ms. O'shaughnessy for a timely and valuable article!

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    5

    Zolio

    09/15/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How I Graduated From Berkeley in Two Years

    My sister took AP classes during High School like crazy, and was able to skip an entire year of college at UCSB. She got her Bachelor's in Medicine in 2 years and her Master's in 4.

    Her scholarships and grants paid for 6 semesters. She barely afforded college. The lucky one in the family.

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    6

    gabi532

    10/06/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How I Graduated From Berkeley in Two Years

    Interesting. It took me 5, but was worth every dime. I agree with taking summer & extension classes, but also saved a ton of money by going to a community college in California. Otherwise my dream of living in the SF Bay area woud NOT have happened. On the contrary, studying abroad was THE BEST semester I ever had! It fit in with my curriculum and was less expensive than staying at my own campus. FIGURE THIS Out. wink also, it helped me view new cultures and experiences I will NEVER forget. Worth every dime! Also, it lead to me living in this country later on.

    The few people I knew who graduated in a short time say they regretted it. IT was a blur for them. Very sad.

    Financially speaking, your daughter's plan sounds great, but I think I would be very burned out if I followed suit.

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    7

    CE7000

    10/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: How I Graduated From Berkeley in Two Years

    How would Kalika know if studying abroad is a waste of time, if she didn't study abroad? I studied abroad in Rome and London during college and my life has completely changed because of it. It is trite, but I cannot imagine what my life would be like without it, and unfortunately I often feel sad for my peers who did not.

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Lynn O'Shaughnessy

Lynn O'Shaughnessy is a financial journalist and the author of a critically acclaimed book, The College Solution: A Guide for Everyone Looking for the Right School at the Right Price. She has been a contributor to such publications as BusinessWeek, USA Today, Money Magazine, Medical Economics, The New York Times, Consumer Reports MoneyAdvisor, The Chronicle of Philanthropy, AARP: The Magazine and Kiplinger

Lynn O'Shaughnessy

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