Anonymous wrote:I am the PP in that thread whose uncle was given a subsidized apartment in Morningside Heights as part of his compensation package from Columbia. Huge apartment. Do universities still subsidize housing like that? I feel like that apartment would sell for at least 3 million today and probably much more. It was huge with 4 bedrooms (one was a small maid's room), an eat in kitchen, and a dining room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It strongly depends what academic field. The sciences/engineering/business/law, particularly at research universities, are all going to be higher paying than the humanities.
DH makes 350 a year. Most likely that's as much as he will make.
Doing what? Even the university presidents don't make 350k/year.
Anonymous wrote:I am the PP in that thread whose uncle was given a subsidized apartment in Morningside Heights as part of his compensation package from Columbia. Huge apartment. Do universities still subsidize housing like that? I feel like that apartment would sell for at least 3 million today and probably much more. It was huge with 4 bedrooms (one was a small maid's room), an eat in kitchen, and a dining room.
Anonymous wrote:DH was a tenure track prof at AU 7 years ago - pay was less than a public school teacher and the benefits were way worse. We had to pay hundreds of dollars a month each for our kids health insurance - basically the full cost it was insane. They added ' partner benefits' but what benefits? Basically you have to have another job to survive in this area - write a textbook for freshman classes (high yield to make a lot of money, but not scholarly work), deliver newspapers- something. Marry rich?
Anonymous wrote:DH was a tenure track prof at AU 7 years ago - pay was less than a public school teacher and the benefits were way worse. We had to pay hundreds of dollars a month each for our kids health insurance - basically the full cost it was insane. They added ' partner benefits' but what benefits? Basically you have to have another job to survive in this area - write a textbook for freshman classes (high yield to make a lot of money, but not scholarly work), deliver newspapers- something. Marry rich?
I hate how little we value education in this country.Anonymous wrote:It strongly depends what academic field. The sciences/engineering/business/law, particularly at research universities, are all going to be higher paying than the humanities.
DH makes 350 a year. Most likely that's as much as he will make.
Anonymous wrote:DH was a tenure track prof at AU 7 years ago - pay was less than a public school teacher and the benefits were way worse. We had to pay hundreds of dollars a month each for our kids health insurance - basically the full cost it was insane. They added ' partner benefits' but what benefits? Basically you have to have another job to survive in this area - write a textbook for freshman classes (high yield to make a lot of money, but not scholarly work), deliver newspapers- something. Marry rich?
Anonymous wrote:Would it be a surprise to learn that things were easier in the past?