I would imagine a lot of people fall into either of those categories. I think more likely fall into wanting to do something they enjoy - not necessarily love though - and make a living while doing it.
Hmmm, you don't see doctors on there either. I wonder why?
Median annual wages of atmospheric scientists in May 2008 were $81,290. The middle 50 percent earned between $55,140 and $101,340. The lowest 10 percent earned less than $38,990, and the highest 10 percent earned more than $127,100.
The average salary for meteorologists employed by the Federal Government was $93,661 in March 2009.
http://www.bls.gov/oco/ocos051.htm#earnings
I'll let you guys figure it out.![]()
I would imagine a lot of people fall into either of those categories. I think more likely fall into wanting to do something they enjoy - not necessarily love though - and make a living while doing it.
What ing doctor do you go to that is only has an undergraduate degree?
This summer was probably pretty good to pump up their accuracy.
I see the hamster is turning the wheel.
I bet that those people with half as much in their 401k as a few years ago feel the same about people in finance.![]()
(I think that was the point.)
I smell something burning.
Oh, and I highly recommend changing your screenname. Highly.
My undergrad degree is toward the bottom of the list, which is not at all surprising. Have a feeling my grad degree would be down there, too.
You can't get jobs with half of those degrees so i'm not sure why those students would be worried about how much the make.
You're right. And Cucking Funt is right.
So you all can make a historical note that on September 13, 2011, canththinkofanything made his first dumbass statement.
Let's be pragmatic for a moment: If you have an inheritance that you can use to support your desired lifestyle, then you can do anything you want and your degree is just an emblem in some cases. However if you are working two jobs to pay for school, and the loans are going to bury you financially, you better use some common sense and get an education that's going to keep you financially solvent.
So I don't think it's "solely" either way for most people. You won't be good at something you aren't interested in, but then if you cannot make a living at it, regardless how much you like it, you won't be able to do it anyhow.
They themselves didn't engineer it but they did things to keep the bubble going (which made the collapse worse when it happened) that they profited from. I don't really blame them tho for re ed Americans who don't know what an adjustable rate mortgage was and didn't live within their means, if I was a hedge fund manager from 2005-2007 I woulda done the same thing.
Don't expect the "go into a career you love and desire regardless of pay
" idiots to think logically. The concept that "money doesn't matter or buy happiness" is one of the biggest myths out there.
underachiever.
Finance degrees are for chumps. Information is the key.
Money is a necessary but not sufficient condition tbh.
Not true. AA/AS equivalent and good experience can get you far.
Those types generally keep my brother in law in business, he a doc in a rehab clinic.
lol hating american soldiers and supporting the raping of America
Stand up guy I tell ya! Keep holding that nose higher than everyone else.
Supporting? All I said was that if I were in their shoes from 2005-2007, I would have also done everything I could to profit off the economic collapse.
That's why I support regulation and redistribution of wealth. Greedy s such as me wanna make as much money as possible and don't care who we rape and pillage in the process, the only thing that'll stop it is regulation and higher taxes.
There are exceptions to every rule, but in general you are much more likely to make >$80K if you have an advanced degree.
Liberal Arts is a bit off, 37k-62k? lol.
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