This is older, but I'm answering because I think it is interesting in today's age.
I went to college for marketing and psychology. Ten years ago, I would have told you it was the greatest two choices I ever made. Now, not so much. Now, I think psychology is largely a lot of pseudoscience. The same can be said about marketing, I think. When I was younger, I had won some scholarships to Columbus Academy of Art and Design. Part of me wishes I had gone that route instead. But over the years, I think I've filled a lot of that void with extreme learning online. At the time, I had also considered the D.A.V.E school and went on a tour there. But the cost was too high. Interestingly, at the time, they used Lightwave.
Now that I have a bit more time to learn 3D on a more dedicated level, I'm utilizing as many places as I can. Pluralsight, Lynda, Greyscalegorilla, Patreon, Learn Squared, Mograph Plus, Art Station, Elementza, The VFX School, etc. I was thinking of taking some courses at the School of Motion, but I don't know that what I'll learn hasn't already been covered elsewhere.
The issue, I'm finding, is that as you get deeper into learning at higher levels, it becomes harder to find places to learn. I'm not at those levels, by any stretch of the imagination, but it is something I've noticed as I've been exploring places to dedicate my time in learning at. I think that is where college has benefits.