Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL. Most people in the US don't have bachelor degrees; a masters is a while away from being a HS diploma.
Maybe in the entire US but here in DC area Masters are dime-a-dozen
This is inaccurate. Fewer than 23% of 25+ adults in DC have graduate degrees. That means more than 77% do not.
http://www.governing.com/blogs/by-the-numbers/graduate-professional-degrees-for-metro-areas.html
Anonymous wrote:Two reasons to get a masters:
1) It advances you in your career field
2) You love the subject and can't learn enough about it
If it doesn't fulfill either one of those, and you just want more letters next to your name, then it's a waste of time and money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL. Most people in the US don't have bachelor degrees; a masters is a while away from being a HS diploma.
Maybe in the entire US but here in DC area Masters are dime-a-dozen
This is inaccurate. Fewer than 23% of 25+ adults in DC have graduate degrees. That means more than 77% do not.
http://www.governing.com/blogs/by-the-numbers/graduate-professional-degrees-for-metro-areas.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL. Most people in the US don't have bachelor degrees; a masters is a while away from being a HS diploma.
Maybe in the entire US but here in DC area Masters are dime-a-dozen
Anonymous wrote:Eh, it depends. I was unemployable after getting my B.A. I went into debt ($60k) for a Master's Degree out of desperation, but it worked out. I immediately got a job paying $50k, left after 3 years for a job paying $75k, two years later I crossed the $100k mark. Paying off the debt was hard but manageable. I really didn't have a choice at the time; I was making $10/hr at temp jobs and had countless rejections.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eh, it depends. I was unemployable after getting my B.A. I went into debt ($60k) for a Master's Degree out of desperation, but it worked out. I immediately got a job paying $50k, left after 3 years for a job paying $75k, two years later I crossed the $100k mark. Paying off the debt was hard but manageable. I really didn't have a choice at the time; I was making $10/hr at temp jobs and had countless rejections.
I'm in the same boat. My degree is in communications. The masters would be Public health. What is your masters in?
My B.A. was in a foreign language. My Master's is in Int'l Aff/Public Policy. Which is not a sure thing or a safe bet.
Almost identical. The masters resulted in a substantial salary bump in my case, but friends in public health seem to think you'd have to go for the PhD for it to make sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eh, it depends. I was unemployable after getting my B.A. I went into debt ($60k) for a Master's Degree out of desperation, but it worked out. I immediately got a job paying $50k, left after 3 years for a job paying $75k, two years later I crossed the $100k mark. Paying off the debt was hard but manageable. I really didn't have a choice at the time; I was making $10/hr at temp jobs and had countless rejections.
I'm in the same boat. My degree is in communications. The masters would be Public health. What is your masters in?
My B.A. was in a foreign language. My Master's is in Int'l Aff/Public Policy. Which is not a sure thing or a safe bet.
Anonymous wrote:Two reasons to get a masters:
1) It advances you in your career field
2) You love the subject and can't learn enough about it
If it doesn't fulfill either one of those, and you just want more letters next to your name, then it's a waste of time and money.
Anonymous wrote:LOL. Most people in the US don't have bachelor degrees; a masters is a while away from being a HS diploma.