FoundMyPrince
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- May 17, 2007
- Messages
- 1,697
Have you tried going on say to Law school, or Medical school.. that isn't just a Masters.. and you really cannot "work" while doing that.. this is what I am trying to say.. my DD worked while going to school, and I paid along with her.. read my post.. we have no loans.. zip, nada.. nothing.. no loans.. in fact, I am debt free.. I even own my home outright.. and yes, as others are saying, there is a choice.. but ask your doctor about a choice.. ask an attorney about a choice.. ask your professor's about a choice.. ask anyone who has gone past their "Masters" about a choice.. Once you hit that level of education, you really cannot "work" while attending and it is a bit expensive.. look into the price...Unless you take on class a semester.. and it takes you years to finish.. otherwise you are talking student loans...
here is some info... can you afford this.. I know I cannot.. even a few classes at a time..
http://hms.harvard.edu/admissions/default.asp?page=costs
Costs
Harvard Medical School tuition rates are reset annually and cover courses taken from August 1 through June 30 each year up to the final year of enrollment ending with graduation. Tuition is billed by semester. Two forms of term bill payment are available: payment in full by semester or monthly payments (payments for the year are spread over eight months). The monthly payment plan carries a service charge of $35 per semester.
An estimate of yearly expenses shows that the average cost for an unmarried first-year student will be approximately $73,000 for the 2011-2012 academic year. This estimate includes tuition, health service fee and insurance premium, room and board, books, travel, transportation to clinical sites, laundry, and incidentals. Students whose homes are outside the northeast region of the United States may experience travel costs beyond the scope of this estimate.
Maybe I haven't been paying close enough attention, but I'm not sure these guys sitting on Wall Street are all medical school students, or wanted to be medical school students. Perhaps they are.