Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are any of you actually teachers (or nurses?).
I work as a nurse in DC. I can afford to live in DC because (by luck) I'm married to a high earner. 98% of my coworkers live an hour+ out of the city because that's where they can begin to afford to buy a house (and generally a townhouse). All of my kids' teachers live there as well except for those married
to a high income earner. Many of the rest leave the DC area entirely when they hit 30 and want to buy a house, have kids, etc.
Look, I'm all in favor of kids following their passion. But I'm torn. I know the reality of making a salary that many (most?) on DCUM openly mock. I'm honestly torn about what I'll tell my own kids when they're choosing college majors.
I'm not torn at all. I'm a RN married to a high earner living in NoVa. I have told my kids that nursing is very stressful work lot work for little pay. I don't want them going into nursing.
You can move anywhere as a nurse and find a job. There will always be a demand for your skills and your profession. Some of the ridiculous salaries in other professions that we hear about on DCUM are not going to be found just anywhere.
If my kid had an interest in the field of nursing (or teaching) I would tell them to pursue it - IF that is what they wanted to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are any of you actually teachers (or nurses?).
I work as a nurse in DC. I can afford to live in DC because (by luck) I'm married to a high earner. 98% of my coworkers live an hour+ out of the city because that's where they can begin to afford to buy a house (and generally a townhouse). All of my kids' teachers live there as well except for those married
to a high income earner. Many of the rest leave the DC area entirely when they hit 30 and want to buy a house, have kids, etc.
Look, I'm all in favor of kids following their passion. But I'm torn. I know the reality of making a salary that many (most?) on DCUM openly mock. I'm honestly torn about what I'll tell my own kids when they're choosing college majors.
I'm not torn at all. I'm a RN married to a high earner living in NoVa. I have told my kids that nursing is very stressful work lot work for little pay. I don't want them going into nursing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are any of you actually teachers (or nurses?).
I work as a nurse in DC. I can afford to live in DC because (by luck) I'm married to a high earner. 98% of my coworkers live an hour+ out of the city because that's where they can begin to afford to buy a house (and generally a townhouse). All of my kids' teachers live there as well except for those married
to a high income earner. Many of the rest leave the DC area entirely when they hit 30 and want to buy a house, have kids, etc.
Look, I'm all in favor of kids following their passion. But I'm torn. I know the reality of making a salary that many (most?) on DCUM openly mock. I'm honestly torn about what I'll tell my own kids when they're choosing college majors.
I'm not torn at all. I'm a RN married to a high earner living in NoVa. I have told my kids that nursing is very stressful work lot work for little pay. I don't want them going into nursing.
Anonymous wrote:This is why parent's shouldn't just pay for college. Let your kid take a loan and make the decisions THEY want to make. You can always set conditions under which you'll be happy to help them pay off the loan.
Let the kid have some skin in the game.
Anonymous wrote:Are any of you actually teachers (or nurses?).
I work as a nurse in DC. I can afford to live in DC because (by luck) I'm married to a high earner. 98% of my coworkers live an hour+ out of the city because that's where they can begin to afford to buy a house (and generally a townhouse). All of my kids' teachers live there as well except for those married
to a high income earner. Many of the rest leave the DC area entirely when they hit 30 and want to buy a house, have kids, etc.
Look, I'm all in favor of kids following their passion. But I'm torn. I know the reality of making a salary that many (most?) on DCUM openly mock. I'm honestly torn about what I'll tell my own kids when they're choosing college majors.
Anonymous wrote:Just have her marry a rich guy. Then, in several years, she can quit teaching and start posting bitter messages in this forum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My favorite teacher- AP calc- was a former computer programmer. Best math teacher ever. And she opening told us she left a $250k+ job to teach HS math once her kids all were in school (5yo plus).
Maybe she knows she has a trust fund so why strive.
If she hated the stress of doing computer programming work in an office and loves teaching AP Calc to HS kids she made a great choice.
She liked her programming job for 15 years and then her teaching the other 15 years. Very intelligent, positive woman who never put down difficult disciplines. Hope you don’t talk like that around your kids let alone a classroom of them.
One thing is for sure. If you never try you never really know. Think about all the nonsense and advice you’ve gotten from others to persuade you to give up or not try. Never be that person w regret of not trying.
O.k. she loved both careers. That's great. She's the one who had to point out that she left a 250K job to go teach kids, though....
She pointed that out if some wise ass wasn’t taking their math homework or class seriously. She wasn’t there for any other reason than to teach us math very well. She was incredibly effective teacher whom we all respected. And this was in the late 1990s.
Is that Ok with you or do you just like nitpicking everything for no good reason.
Anonymous wrote:I honestly have no idea what business grads do anyway. Apart from accounting, it is all foreign to me. Maybe your DD feels the same?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My favorite teacher- AP calc- was a former computer programmer. Best math teacher ever. And she opening told us she left a $250k+ job to teach HS math once her kids all were in school (5yo plus).
Maybe she knows she has a trust fund so why strive.
If she hated the stress of doing computer programming work in an office and loves teaching AP Calc to HS kids she made a great choice.
She liked her programming job for 15 years and then her teaching the other 15 years. Very intelligent, positive woman who never put down difficult disciplines. Hope you don’t talk like that around your kids let alone a classroom of them.
One thing is for sure. If you never try you never really know. Think about all the nonsense and advice you’ve gotten from others to persuade you to give up or not try. Never be that person w regret of not trying.
O.k. she loved both careers. That's great. She's the one who had to point out that she left a 250K job to go teach kids, though....