 Before I had taken this class, I never considered even wildly the possibility that with a little help the workers could do it themselves. No one knows about it, and it's different. It's hard to explain what a cooperative is. It's something that we should do a lot more. I'm an econ major, just trying to fit it into the economics I was learning here. It's different from my other econ classes, like Marksman and Macro, Micro, more team-based. Everyone works just as hard and participates more, if anything, than they do in other classes. You give your voice, your voice is heard, your opinions are meaningful, which I feel like is kind of empowering. It'd be great if this could expand to all of the colleges, because it's a super interesting class. I think it just gives students incentives to want to work hard at a job. People work better when they're self-motivated, as opposed to taking orders. They know that their performance reflects onto the company and it reflects onto their pay as well. So I feel like when you have worker owners as opposed to one owner and workers, there's a lot more motivation. There's a lot more stride to do your best and try to make a company as best as you can. The same way that a more fuel-efficient car is going to aid the atmosphere, Cooperative Model is the only great other option for the financial sector. I think we won't really know what works and what doesn't until we go out there and test it out. Co-ops are awesome. That's probably been one of my favorite classes this semester.