Noen on point as well. While I never worked during a semester, I did my fair share of common jobs. I learned a shit ton from those positions that transition into the engineering field, if nothing more than learning to get along with blue-collar workers, team work, and good old customer service/common courtesy.
9/20/2011 9:03:53 AM
It's not even about writing a good resume. Sometimes it just depends on the mood of the person reviewing resumes. I remember once we had a candidate that had a two year unexplained gap in their resume. My guess was that they were in grad school at the time but didn't want to include that on their resume for fear of being considered overqualified. Rather than bring the person in for an interview they just tossed it in the trash. I felt bad for the guy but sometimes you could have the best written resume in the world but it won't mean squat depending on who is reviewing those resumes.
9/20/2011 10:19:54 AM
Noen your ignorance is displayed more with every post. Just stop and save some face.
9/20/2011 11:05:17 AM
^In 5th grade my parents told me if I wanted to go to college, I needed to start saving. Then they handed me a book of deposit slips for a saving account. By the time I started college, I had enough money to pay my first semester tuition, room and board, and books up front, yet didn't take a dime from my parents.It's plausible that others have done the same thing.
9/20/2011 11:12:01 AM
9/20/2011 11:13:53 AM
^Yeah, it's probably not though
9/20/2011 11:22:22 AM
^^Yeah...you're just wrong.Here's a pretty good blog: http://thirdtierreality.blogspot.com/It's only entertaining in a really depressing way, though. The fact is, many of these third/fourth tier schools have popped up in the last decade, just cashing in on the bubble. A lot of the law professors are JDs that couldn't find work or wanted to make money off of people's ignorance. Traditionally, law school was selective and generally meant that you would end up in a high income position. Fast forward to today, and not only is a high income job not guaranteed, it's not all that likely.If you also take into account that we need to shake this regulatory burden holding back the economy, the legal profession is not one that needs to grow. When you think about it, lawyers don't really create anything of value...they just navigate around government laws and regulations. It would be better for a lot of these people going into bad law schools to work, or go into tech fields.[Edited on September 20, 2011 at 11:28 AM. Reason : ]
9/20/2011 11:24:10 AM
A lot of it depends on the type of law you studied, when you graduated, etc. A friend of mine graduated from law school just as the economy was crashing. Took her over a year to get a job even remotely in her field and she's making less than I do. My student loans suck but at least I'm not being crushed with debt like her.I think a big problem is generations have been sold on this idea that getting a degree instantly means a better life. And now we're being told that getting a graduate degree instantly leads to that better life. And that's simply not the case. As a society we need to decide if it's really worthwhile to have so many people go to college and if we maybe wouldn't be better suited by allowing for the training in trades during secondary education.
9/20/2011 11:28:09 AM
9/20/2011 11:35:06 AM
^^^I've read a great deal about the current situation for people leaving law school...if you guys will recall, there have been multiple threads posted about it on TWW.However, 100k is like a very small, crappy house. There's no way you guys are telling me that somebody with two college degrees can't pay that off in a lifetime. Working class families with no degrees do that all the time...but 100k is too much for a crappy attorney?!?! Whatever.[Edited on September 20, 2011 at 11:37 AM. Reason : You're just wrong.]
9/20/2011 11:39:46 AM
^^You understand how interest works, right? You also understand that interest rates across the board are artificially low right now, and at some point, they're going to have to rise substantially?Best bet for borrowers is to hope that their debt gets inflated away...and that's pretty damn likely.[Edited on September 20, 2011 at 11:40 AM. Reason : ]
9/20/2011 11:39:55 AM
^That and the interest rate for something such as a law degree is nearly double what you would pay on a house, making the payments that much worse. On top of that, regardless if you have a law degree or not, it would be hard to pay down for a 100k "crappy house" if you don't have a job.As usual, BridgetSPK, you've made a lot of assumptions but don't really know many facts about the issue. Perhaps you should keep your mouth shut and eyes open so you can learn a thing or two.
9/20/2011 11:57:41 AM
9/20/2011 12:11:28 PM
9/20/2011 12:22:25 PM
9/20/2011 12:27:49 PM
9/20/2011 12:28:21 PM
^^^There can be a lot of moral hazard, I'll grant you that, but I would say the bigger problem with regulation is not the regulation itself, but starting something and not following through with it, which ends up creating an even bigger mess. With the housing situation, perhaps they did try to drive the idea that everyone should buy a house for a while, but the Fed also could have popped the housing bubble, restricted ultra-leveraged financial instruments that nobody understands, and cracked down on predatory lenders. You can't just put the car on cruise control and do a tuck and roll out of it, which is more or less what happened. Government intervention is fine as long as it's competent, but sadly that's where we've been really failing in the past 10 years or so.[Edited on September 20, 2011 at 12:35 PM. Reason : ^]
9/20/2011 12:35:31 PM
9/20/2011 12:45:15 PM
I'm not saying that racking up $100K+ in debt from a lower tier law school isn't a problem. But the economy is much more to blame than getting a degree from a less heralded law school. The law degree has declined in value because the market is saturated and the economy sucks. People are either too broke to hire lawyers or they aren't paying their bills. Law firms aren't hiring, so the unemployed recent law grads are stacking up higher and higher every year. I know plenty of unemployed law grads from first and second tier schools and I know a good number of grads from lower tiered schools who got great jobs.There aren't too many majors or post-grads degrees that will guarantee you a well-paying job right after graduation. A law degree use to do that...it just doesn't anymore.
9/20/2011 12:57:38 PM
^^And I don't mean to be harsh. It's just that the conversation feels very perverted: Look at all these pitiful attorneys and PhD holders! We need to help these poor souls get out of the debt that they greedily signed up for!
9/20/2011 1:14:31 PM
If that's what you got from the conversation, I don't know what to say.Also...900 dollars/month for living expenses? That was considered poverty in the 1990s. These days...lol. Hope you don't drive. Or eat.
9/20/2011 1:58:50 PM
9/20/2011 2:03:56 PM
^^The $900 thing was sort of a joke--I wouldn't expect someone to become a teacher and pay off law schools loans and live on that...they should wait tables evenings/weekends, too. But, seriously, how do you think people live when they are actually trying to pay off a huge debt? You do realize that, if they can't increase their earnings, then they technically might live in poverty, right? That's pretty much how it's done.And I hear your points about dishonest law schools and the cost of education being artificially inflated by subsidies, and I agree that something needs to be done about it...but let's not pretend it's impossible to pay off 100k in student loan debt if you went to a less a competitive law school.
9/20/2011 2:24:32 PM
^^Lucky Ducky!!!
9/20/2011 2:27:16 PM
9/20/2011 3:49:16 PM
9/20/2011 3:54:28 PM
Yep I know a few people with trade school certificates that make more than I will anytime soon. Makes me wonder if I should have just gotten an MLT certificate from Wake Tech.
9/20/2011 3:57:15 PM
9/20/2011 7:06:31 PM
9/20/2011 8:30:43 PM
^ Kind of like Social Security
9/20/2011 8:32:00 PM
^ Exactly like Social Security. Not exactly sure what's eye rolly about that.
9/20/2011 8:36:13 PM
9/20/2011 9:12:19 PM
You seem to be stuck on people who abuse unemployment benefits, which isn't the conversation. People who use it as it's intended (those who I assume whatshisname up there was talking about) don't get much more (if any) than they put into it. If anything, it's an investment in those workers to eventually get another job and grow the economy. 99-weekers are another discussion, but are irrelevant in attacking legit use of unemployment insurance.Your holier-than-thou attitude is not surprising (you're always a pretentious twat), but it's absurd to rationalize the idea that your situation is applicable to everyone. Shit happens, man. Get out of your ivory Lotus.edit:
9/20/2011 9:26:12 PM
9/20/2011 9:40:29 PM
9/20/2011 9:48:11 PM
^I never said a damn thing about flipping burgers. I'm talking about living wages here, not working food service (even though a LOT of people, on this site included, make a decent living doing just that).
9/20/2011 10:03:36 PM
9/20/2011 10:04:05 PM
9/20/2011 10:11:21 PM
^^^Not to be too pedantic here but
9/20/2011 10:12:36 PM
And the state is hurting for teachers?What fucking planet do you live on
9/20/2011 10:15:44 PM
Noen You are, at this point, sounding delusional
9/20/2011 10:18:58 PM
Forgive student loans, just make college free for everyone then...oh yeah, the rich can afford it...
9/20/2011 10:25:53 PM
9/20/2011 11:19:23 PM
The sign of a successful society: When your heart surgeon was ringing you up at Teeter two weeks before your coronary
9/20/2011 11:39:08 PM
honestly... if someone told me that all my student loans up to this point were forgiven, I'd take out another student loan and get my doctorate I just really like school
9/21/2011 12:55:39 AM
^^ Quit being judgmental and making that scenario demeaning/derogetory. That's the wrong attitude to have.[Edited on September 21, 2011 at 12:59 AM. Reason : .]
9/21/2011 12:59:16 AM
It's not about being judgmental, it's about wasted potential. There are unskilled people to do unskilled jobs and there should be a focus on stimulating the economy to create jobs for skilled labor. You are not going to have a productive society that can keep up with the rest of the modernized world if your Ph.D.s are bagging groceries, period.Granted I was being sarcastic but that sarcasm is directed toward the conditions that created the problem, not the people suffering from it.[Edited on September 21, 2011 at 1:09 AM. Reason : ]
9/21/2011 1:06:29 AM
So like a true democrat, this problem can be "solved" by throwing money at it You can't just put money into the system and expect it to be fixed. Sure you may "fix" it for now, but in the long run you've done nothing. You can catch a fish and feed a man for a day or you can teach that man to fish and he will eat for a lifetime.You stimulate the economy by telling people to GTFO and get a job. I don't care if your proficient skillset is with heart surgery or civil engineering bridge construction. There are certain needs in society and if it's a bagger at a grocery store or a secretarial position in an office then so be it. There's no shame in an honest day's worth of work. Either way, bills need to be paid. People are expecting a handout from the government to help create jobs for them. That's not how it works, nor how it's supposed to work. The world is a dynamic environment (imagine that!) and society's needs are also dynamic. So, instead of being an unproductive, jobless citizen with no income waiting for their "ideal" job to become available, they should find another one that will help provide them with income while helping society run efficiently. This whole "I'm too good to work at job a because it's unskilled labor" is bullshit. It's equal opportunity. Doctorate or high school drop out, it doesn't matter. Jobs are available. If more people have an income then there's more people "stimulating" the economy. Over time, it will "fix" itself without any handouts or increased government spending.[Edited on September 21, 2011 at 1:24 AM. Reason : .]
9/21/2011 1:21:00 AM
Hahaha I love how you spout these meaningless platitudes. Like, "wait, he'll eat for a whole lifetime? Wow, now I'm convinced!"I mean (a) there's no such thing as a free market in reality, but (b) even in a Chicago School blank slate laboratory, what do you think happens when a person with housing, food, insurance, etc. costs (because a minimum wage employer certainly isn't paying insurance) is trying to save some amount of money (because a minimum wage employer certainly isn't contributing to a 401(k)) and paying down student loan debt on top of that? They are spending money on bills. That's it. We saw it in the last stimulus, which wasn't big enough to stop the downward spiral but did prevent unemployment from going as low as it could have. What you're advocating is to let the rich people create the jobs with the immense wealth that they currently have and are sitting on and not creating jobs with, because the free market will make it happen.I don't even know what's gonna happen when we have a little robotic crane arm that will bag groceries for you, but they're already preparing drone tractors being rolled out to replace farm labor, which is one of the biggest hirers of unskilled labor. There roads and bridges that need to be fixed and engineered, and private industry can be hired to do that by the government, but they're not going to do it on their own. We could be hiring more scientists to research energy and medicine. It's not like that those things would be a handout with no benefits to the country.This is kind of tangential, but what happens down the line when we have 300 million people in the workforce but society doesn't need 400 million jobs filled?[Edited on September 21, 2011 at 1:43 AM. Reason : .]
9/21/2011 1:42:39 AM