What industry/role? |
| DS got a return offer from his Big 4 audit internship. |
| DC will be returning to the office of a past internship, for a two-year full-time position. Applied for maybe three dozen other jobs over the past few months and had two other interviews. Very glad to be done with the hunt! |
+1. PhD here. My grad program in the social sciences commonly admitted students to PhD program straight out of undergrad, who then earn an MS and a PhD. The dept prioritized funding for these students to the same degree that they did for students coming in with a Masters already. |
| One Psychology major, has a PT job working with troubled teens that will turn into a FT job, one Economics major/International Relations minor still looking, has accepted a summer job at their old camp while still applying and interviewing |
| That is what matters in the end. What did you make out of your 4 years in college? Partying in a T20 or grinding? It is all about you. The school can only get you to the door, the rest is on you. |
| DS is looking. Debating on doing paralegal work as he's unsure about law school. |
Or pre-med or nursing, but yes. |
Engineering major. Has a job offer resulting from a summer internship. |
That’s just a phd admission? You don’t need a masters to start a PhD in the us. Even if you already have a masters, you get a masters+PhD in America. People here don’t know what the hell they’re talking about. |
You’re just wrong. No one denies her admission, just you don’t understand the process clearly and are loud about your own mistakes. |
Science masters here—don’t know what that person is talking about. I was accepted to several top programs and at all you could get masters or phd or both—your choice. |
You apply to a masters or PhD program. Masters are typically not funded and lowest priority for TAship. In general, if you’re admitted to a PhD program, you first do coursework to get through a masters, then you move on to ABD. Typically a masters student isn’t getting a PhD at the same institution without having to reapply, since PhD admission costs money and they have to pay for your tuition/fees while providing a stipend. No department with money sense gives a masters student a PhD “option,” without reapplication, because the funding streams are entirely separate. This isn’t Europe, where a masters is expected for a PhD and a PhD is 3 years. |
+1, the only understanding too. DD is getting her PhD right out of undergrad, as is most of her cohort. All the masters students are paying $80,000/ year to be there- she gets paid to be there. |
DS has a few friends in fully funded masters programs. I think the universities would love these students to continue on to get the PhD, it’s more the student who isn’t sure. So yes, it happens. DS is a fully funded PhD student in engineering. |