xcrazydave Posted February 17, 2008 Posted February 17, 2008 Anyone work full time in the field while in a good grad school? How does it work out?
unknownscholar Posted February 17, 2008 Posted February 17, 2008 I'd like to know info on this too. I am currently working in my intended field and have gotten accepted to GWU with no funding. The good news is that none of their classes start until after 5 so working, via VPN, certainly looks favorable. But I don't know when I'd get my class work done :?:
rising_star Posted February 18, 2008 Posted February 18, 2008 I know some folks who work full-time and they tend to take no more than two classes a semester. They get schoolwork done in the evenings and on the weekend. Time management skills are key.
Nofia Posted April 11, 2008 Posted April 11, 2008 I worked full-time while getting my first masters (going to school full time), and it was doable. You need to have good time management skills and you need to be willing to give up a fair amount of socializing, but if its worth it to you, you'll do it and be fine. that said, I don't know how it would be in a PhD program. I'm going back in the fall to start a PhD in a field related to my first masters, but not in that field (so no skipping coursework or anything--itll still be the full 5-7+ years), and the first year in this new program is apparently very rigorous (you get the ma after the first year), so I dont think I'll be working this time around. I think it depends on the program and you're willingness to make some sacrifices.
polisciphd Posted April 14, 2008 Posted April 14, 2008 I'd like to know info on this too. I am currently working in my intended field and have gotten accepted to GWU with no funding. The good news is that none of their classes start until after 5 so working, via VPN, certainly looks favorable. But I don't know when I'd get my class work done :?: I worked full time while a grad student at the Elliott School, as did most other people in my class. You should be fine. It might take an extra summer of classes if you aren't taking 10 hours per semester, but in the scheme of things that is not that bad. Just remember that when you sit down and work out your schedule, make sure that your reading/writing time has no interruptions, make it like a second job.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now