<p>I am facing a conundrum. As many of you who frequent College Confidential know, I have a disorder called Asperger's syndrome, which is a mild form of autism. I have been making great progress, but as college application deadlines approach, the list of things that I cannot yet do appears dauntingly long: I can't drive yet, I can't manage money yet, I don't have workplace social skills yet, I can't remember to take my medicine every day yet...the list goes on. I think that I could get into some of the schools that I'm applying to, but I'm worried that they would eat me alive :(</p>
<p>My therapist and my special ed teacher have proposed that I take a year at community college so that I can get the independent living skills that I need before transferring to an LAC. I could accumulate college credits, go through a vocational rehabilitation program*, get a job, learn to drive, and maybe even live on my own for a month or two. In theory, I could also start fresh with my GPA, get some work experience, beef up my transcripts, and do all the volunteer work that I wasn't able to do in high school. Sounds like a good idea, right?</p>
<p>I'm not so sure. I want to go to a small liberal arts school, and I'm not sure that small liberal arts schools are very nice to community college transfers. Is a 4.0 GPA at Pelissippi State ("Your Success Connection!") better or worse than a 3.3 UW HS GPA? I don't know. Should I go ahead and risk a four-year college so that I can avoid the maze of transfer admissions? Again, I don't know. SHOULD I GO TO COMMUNITY COLLEGE? Don't know. </p>
<p>Not that I could be "chanced" yet, but I am hoping to apply to certain schools as a transfer.
Wild and Crazy Dreams: Bryn Mawr, Smith, Bates, Connecticut College, Grinnell
Practical Interests: Guilford, College of Wooster, Kalamazoo, Beloit, UNC Asheville, Hollins, Hendrix</p>
<p>*Voc rehab is a state program that teaches independent living skills to people with disabilities. I qualify.</p>