Are there enough hours in the day to both work and study full time? Would it be unhealthy to stress myself out that much?
Doing a degree part time would suck since it'd take me about 6 years to do it.
Well there probably are enough hours, but it's not feasible. If you'd have a perfect schedule it would occupy all your time, you'd have absolutely no free time for yourself other than maybe a few hours in the weekends.
But the biggest problem is that you can't really combine the schedules properly. No matter how flexible they are work hours will overlap classes at some point. When you do both you'll probably have to miss a lot of hours from either your job or, more likely your classes, which will impact your study negatively.
Yes, stressing you out that much is unhealthy, especially if you don't particularly enjoy your work and study. Find an alternative, there has to be one.
>>18201585
I suppose its unrealistic to do it full time.
The alternative is PT with night classes or doing it online. The length of it is annoying but I suppose its unavoidable
>>18201576
I do full time job and full time school also I live in my own and have a pet rabbit and I'm 23 y/o. I still have time for fun but usually only on weekends. You can do it, but it gives you sleepy marks under your eyes
>>18201576
>24 hours
>9 hours work
>7 hours study
>1 hour commute
>8 hours sleep
You're not good at math are you
I used to work 30 hours a week with 4 classes. It was also during 3rd and 4th year classes, so there was a bit more work to do.
It was pretty easy. I always booked sundays off and used that to catch up on leisure or study. Mind you, I only studied a few days before an exam, so if your someone that takes a week to review, it could be hard.