I asked my son if he was going to get a yearbook this year, since it is his senior year in college. He said he had never heard about a 'yearbook' since he has been there. True? Are college yearbooks a 20th century relic in 2010?
I asked my son if he was going to get a yearbook this year, since it is his senior year in college. He said he had never heard about a 'yearbook' since he has been there. True? Are college yearbooks a 20th century relic in 2010?
The Washington Post did a story about the death of the university of Virginia yearbook a couple years ago. They definitly made it sound like it was a trend.
My considerably smaller university has no yearbook either.
my large private school (~13,000 undergrad) did have a year book. But, they charged a lot and I really didn't think it would have much to do with me or people I knew in it. What's the point?
I just graduated from a state school of around 5000-6000 undergrad and they gave out yearbooks for free to all graduating seniors.
not a school with 50, 000 students