davmat787
Diamond Member
Specialized Studies? WTF does that mean?
KT
I think it is the study of the "Special". You know, Special Olympic records and stuff.
Specialized Studies? WTF does that mean?
KT
Ill have under 20k in loans after leaving UCLA with a Poly Sci degree.
(A) is the option I am taking. Community college is just so much cheaper then university. If I went to a four year university for my GE, even living from home I would be paying 4 times as much for the same education.
Man, we need more programmers and engineers. There's such a shortage, that we're hiring people from other countries (namely, India..). All these guys do is send money back to their countries, and not much of that stays inside. Gah.. Job shortage? what job shortage? How come kids aren't choosing technical majors? That said, we also need more engineers and scientists in public office.
Sorry but you realize a poly sci degree is worthless right?
You will end up owing 150K after going to a no-name law school once you realize this after graduation.
Risk/Reward.
I'm middle class white, there was NO financial aid for me. It was all student loans. It's a choice between going to college, or not. I have a masters in psychology and 153,000 in student loans now. I worked full time all the way through my post-secondary education and got a grand total of 3000 dollars in financial aid along the way. Fortunately about 50,000 of that load is below 3% interest rates.
I got hired by a hospital to a position that pays about 15% over what the average for my degree is. I noticed no other members of my team went to state schools, we all went to private colleges. Will the extra loans be worth it in the end? I started much higher than most $ wise, and as such have a higher life-time earning potential, and I believe it's at least in part due to where I went to college. I don't believe the education I got was ANY better, in fact I have found that the education I got at state colleges along the way when I would take courses at them was actually better. But others have a very good perception of the school I got my bachelor's from, and a very very good perception of the school I got my master's from. As such it opened some doors for me through networking with others from this college.
Does this mean I feel vindicated for turning down the 165,000 scholarship for biochemistry I got? Nope. I went full-retard on that one.
Because lifetime post docs in those is common too. Ever heard the term gypsy scientist? Ask me how I know and this was in the good old days when recruiters would stack career day and even fly you out for interview. I had BS Chemistry into lab running instruments all day for $28K then got a MS in materials science (now called materials engineering) before getting a significant raise, I was with a young family working for a DOD contractor and had to borrow from my parents to even buy a house. To make real money I had to take a gig in arabia a couple years.I don't know why more kids don't go into science and engineering. I honestly think kids are more stupid these days, or maybe it's not cool or something.
I know a girl from high school that went to a private school and graduated with $100k in debt with a psychology degree. Now she has to do college all over again to get a nursing degree.
Engineer's great because you typically go to a state school where tuition is more reasonable, and the jobs provide solid pay. If you want to get a master of phd it should be pretty easy getting them for free (or you shouldn't be doing it).
I think I graduated with around $40k (all federal loans) in debt for my engineering bachelors. I paid off half of it extremely quickly. With an engineering job $40k debt isn't a really a big deal.
Here is the problem.
The government guarantees these loans so banks have no disincentive to make the loans.
If the banks knew that someone wanted to take out $150k in debt and would only be making $40k per year they wouldn't make the loans. Sadly they do because the government guarantees them.
On a related topic I think the main reason education is so fucking expensive is a while back somebody figured out kids were willing to take out loans to do college. Now we have 300 dollar books, 100 dollar parking stickers, strange "technology" fees for every class, and credits that cost 20 times what they used to.
Same thing happened with health care. All insurance did was massively inflate the money pool and now it costs 150 bucks to sit in a waiting room, 800 for a bottle of mass-produced pills, and 100,000 to get surgery.
IT DID NOT SOLVE ANY FUCKING PROBLEMS!
And some books go through a crazy number of revisions.Seriously, fuck those technology fees. $200 a quarter for "keeping the class site up". Really? $200 per quarter parking permits.. bs...
And some books go through a crazy number of revisions.
I had one book on manufacturing processes, a $150 book, which appears to receive new revisions every few years.
Freshman year, 2005: It was in the 9th edition, published in late 2003.
2007: 10th edition is published
2011: 11th edition
Meanwhile, my Thermodynamics text book was originally published in 1997, and went to the 2nd edition ten years later.
or go back in time, get a 35 on your act test, and thus get full ride to just any college
(thats what i did)
Here is the problem.
The government guarantees these loans so banks have no disincentive to make the loans.
If the banks knew that someone wanted to take out $150k in debt and would only be making $40k per year they wouldn't make the loans. Sadly they do because the government guarantees them.
I've BEEN going to community college. It sucks even worse. Way too much money for a shitty education that impresses NO ONE!
Work is just plain better. If you can find it.
the other problem is students feeling they are entitled to live on those loans while in college. Its not that hard to get a part time job... but people would rather party on saturday.
Risk/Reward.
I'm middle class white, there was NO financial aid for me. It was all student loans. It's a choice between going to college, or not. I have a masters in psychology and 153,000 in student loans now. I worked full time all the way through my post-secondary education and got a grand total of 3000 dollars in financial aid along the way. Fortunately about 50,000 of that load is below 3% interest rates.
I got hired by a hospital to a position that pays about 15% over what the average for my degree is. I noticed no other members of my team went to state schools, we all went to private colleges. Will the extra loans be worth it in the end? I started much higher than most $ wise, and as such have a higher life-time earning potential, and I believe it's at least in part due to where I went to college. I don't believe the education I got was ANY better, in fact I have found that the education I got at state colleges along the way when I would take courses at them was actually better. But others have a very good perception of the school I got my bachelor's from, and a very very good perception of the school I got my master's from. As such it opened some doors for me through networking with others from this college.
Does this mean I feel vindicated for turning down the 165,000 scholarship for biochemistry I got? Nope. I went full-retard on that one.
I don't know why more kids don't go into science and engineering. I honestly think kids are more stupid these days, or maybe it's not cool or something.
I know a girl from high school that went to a private school and graduated with $100k in debt with a psychology degree. Now she has to do college all over again to get a nursing degree.
Engineer's great because you typically go to a state school where tuition is more reasonable, and the jobs provide solid pay. If you want to get a master of phd it should be pretty easy getting them for free (or you shouldn't be doing it).
I think I graduated with around $40k (all federal loans) in debt for my engineering bachelors. I paid off half of it extremely quickly. With an engineering job $40k debt isn't a really a big deal.
Don't even lie. No it's not. Engineering is easy if you DO THE ASSIGNMENTS AND READ THE BOOK AS INSTRUCTED. All of the teachers will end the class by saying something like "read chapter 2" then next day they carry on as if you had read chapter 2. If you read it, you'll have some idea of what the teacher is talking about and you can at least follow along for the time being. The guys who didn't read chapter 2 have no idea what is going on. The teacher is talking about "wave functions" and "permeability" and the people who didn't read the book don't even know what those terms mean. They can't even follow along. They just write stuff down and hope it makes sense later, and it never does. Not reading the book is why the failure rate is so damn high.Most kids don't go into engineering because its fucking hard.