I went to a Seminary and I'll be happy to share about my experiences there. First, your questions:
Why did you choose this over a more traditional school?
- Because I initially wanted to be a full-time missionary with my church, and I thought that a degree from the largest missionary-sending school of my denomination would 1--look good on the resume and 2--prepare me adequately for it
What seminary/Bible College did/do you attend?
Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas. I received a BA in Humanities from the College at Southwestern, which is actually classified as a Great Books program, but you get a LOT of Bible, too. That's actually one of the reasons I stayed at that school: I studied history, philosophy, AND theology in equal measures, and the faculty there were never afraid of reading secular books (some of my coursework included Darwin, Kant, Bertrand Russell, Dawkins) and discussing them intelligently.
What is your profession, post seminary/Bible College?
ESL missionary, although this may not be the end-goal of my career. I have come to accept (mostly through the tutelage of a great professor and a wonderful book called "Secular Work is Full-Time Service" by Larry Peabody) that vocation is a matter of the heart, not the hands. A missionary or minister is not spiritually better than a teacher, a plumber, or a hairstylist. Anyone who works as unto the Lord, with an open heart and Christ-like attitudes is doing good for the Kingdom. As my fiance said earlier, we are going to be English teachers and will meet more lost people in one year than most pastors do in several.
That being said, I cherish my education because it was so thorough. As I said before, I took a lot of history classes, philosophy, science and world literature alongside old testament, new testament, greek, etc. As a result I feel like I can adequately assess any idea historically, philosophically, and spiritually, and tackle many intellectual objections to Christianity. I feel like my education was extremely good because it was balanced; it wasn't a "bible only" college and if it had I probably would have been intellectually stunted and frustrated.
If you want to go to a Bible College in order to study for professional ministry, or to learn more about the Bible, this is probably a good decision. If you are just seeking to do "something higher" with your life, I would urge you to pray more and assess your natural talents and abilities, because it may be that God wants to use you as a Christ-filled mechanic instead of a miserable minister.