What is Co-op?
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All right, if you guys could tell me a little bit more about your programs, we specifically do. It's a little bit about your course load, however yours it is or not rigorous more. Yikes! I think at you See specifically for fashion design were in the College of design. Architecture are complaining, so it's pretty rigorous program, a lot of work and a lot of studio time. We have to be involved in two extracurriculars outside of our sorority, which is awesome but also time consuming. So there's definitely you have to be good at just balancing your time and having a really good time management figuring out when you're going toe, get your work done. Then also creating space for rest and hanging out with friends and sisters and your sortie while an engineering same idea, like heavy course load eighteen hours. It's a lot of guys imaginary, like all my causes air like all guys and then maybe mean another girl on. Tio go to like my story and, like have like girls who like will support me even when class is a really difficult. I'm struggling through because they're always like like bringing me up and making sure I'm still doing long crosses. Like as Faras, I have all girls and having all girls in your major, especially fashion. So it's nice having a break from that cattiness and being in a group of girls that's actually building each other up. Yeah, I like a lot of my friends like I built a lot of circuit boards and, like doula schematics and like things my major and they always ask me and want me to, like, show them what I'm doing. You guys are both in the Cooper program at U. C. Can you tell me what Coop is in your experience with Coop? What do you like about it? What you dislike about it? How's it helped for school except well, Coop is on a program for at least death and engineering. You have to do five corporate ations to graduate on DSO. Coop is basically having like a work experience like while you're in school. So you would be on schools once Messer than you'd call one semester, and you kind of alternate to graduate. Just because you actually taste of the real world is like the real work you'LL be doing. You'LL find out what you like and don't like. I went in, I was computer engineer and very soon that it's not for me. I like more hands on things and I decided, change my major to collect. You kind of get the experience of being an adult before you really have to be an adult. It's nice to kind of feel like you're somewhat prepared for the real world after graduation, and it's just not as much of a like brutal shock when you graduate. Just because college is a really fun bubble of being around other people your age, and it's nice to have the experience of really being around adults and having to act professionally, and I'm kind of working that sphere. I love the opportunity that I get to work in the industry and design product that's actually put into stores. You definitely do have, like, the tossup of I've had to travel for every one of my co op. So I have the missing out of being in college during those times that I also struggle with just overall, Just like functioning at a role, being an adult and, like, trying to contribute when you don't even really one hundred percent understand your major all the way yet like that kind of is really hard pretending like you know what you're doing, you know? Yeah..