The thought that goes through my mind is: where were the course and
career advisors when these people were signing up for graduate degrees
in a profession that is in long supply and so notoriously low paid. I
doubt that the advisors are working for "mid twenties compensation"
but I don't recall a single message that mentions the poor advice, or
any advice they were given before amassing a mountain of student loan
debt.
John Bing
On Mon, 19 Jun 2000 17:45:05 -0400, Mathew wrote:
>
>>But life isn't fair. It just is.
>
>I would argue that life is more fair than we give it credit for. Sometimes
>we just think it isn't because we don't feel we should have to live by the
>consequences of our own choices. Choices that should be well informed but
>most often aren't. Just a thought that comes to my mind whenever this thread
>returns to the list. (again!) The question I ask of all the complainers is,
>"What were you expecting?" Did you research your expected earning potential
>relative to your investment in your education?
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