speechpathologystudent099 Posted November 19, 2019 Posted November 19, 2019 Hi everyone! I'm in the process of applying to grad schools and I'm unsure if I should stay in state or go out of state. I live in Rhode Island and there's only one graduate program in my state (URI), which is where I am for undergrad. I would stay and continue through the master's program, but I really want to work and live in Massachusetts or Connecticut after I graduate. Financially, it definitely makes more sense for me to stay at URI but I don't know that much about licensure and how it works in different states. If anyone can give any info or advice I'd really appreciate it!!
alyssafrancis Posted November 19, 2019 Posted November 19, 2019 3 hours ago, speechpathologystudent099 said: Hi everyone! I'm in the process of applying to grad schools and I'm unsure if I should stay in state or go out of state. I live in Rhode Island and there's only one graduate program in my state (URI), which is where I am for undergrad. I would stay and continue through the master's program, but I really want to work and live in Massachusetts or Connecticut after I graduate. Financially, it definitely makes more sense for me to stay at URI but I don't know that much about licensure and how it works in different states. If anyone can give any info or advice I'd really appreciate it!! I don’t know what your stats are but my professors “golden rule” is to apply to at least 3 schools. So I would at least apply to URI and then one in Massachusetts and one in Connecticut.
AlwaysaFalcon Posted November 20, 2019 Posted November 20, 2019 Here is information about licensure from ASHA about licensing in the states you're interested in: Rhode Island: https://www.asha.org/advocacy/state/info/RI/licensure/ Connecticut: https://www.asha.org/advocacy/state/info/CT/licensure/ Massachusetts: https://www.asha.org/advocacy/state/info/MA/licensure/ Also if you express to whatever grad school you go to about practicing in another state they should be able to help you or contact ASHA if you have questions. As long as the program is credited by ASHA and you are able to get your license and degree that's all that matters! You can always apply for instate residency if you do move out of state to save on costs! alyssafrancis 1
hopefulfuturespeechie Posted November 20, 2019 Posted November 20, 2019 You need at least 100 public school hrs for Mass so just keep that in mind. Wherever you go to grad school will help you with that. AlwaysaFalcon 1
speechpathologystudent099 Posted November 20, 2019 Author Posted November 20, 2019 Thank you! That is all very helpful info!
CorazonDeSLP Posted November 21, 2019 Posted November 21, 2019 I second @AlwaysaFalcon contact ASHA to verify!
Gracie_whatevs Posted November 28, 2019 Posted November 28, 2019 I'm in CA but University of Rhode Island is on my list of schools to apply to! By chance could you tell me anything about it?? I've never been to that area speechpathologystudent099 1
speechpathologystudent099 Posted December 1, 2019 Author Posted December 1, 2019 (edited) I think I might end up staying at URI if I get in! Edited December 1, 2019 by speechpathologystudent099
speechpathologystudent099 Posted December 1, 2019 Author Posted December 1, 2019 On 11/28/2019 at 12:12 PM, Gracie_whatevs said: I'm in CA but University of Rhode Island is on my list of schools to apply to! By chance could you tell me anything about it?? I've never been to that area Rhode Island is beautiful and it's a great school! I've heard the program is challenging but I think that's true everywhere. The school is in a great location with the beach only 15 minutes away, Newport is also around a 30 minute drive, and Boston is less than two hours away. I haven't been to California and I'm dying to go but I would say the biggest difference might be the weather because we do get a decent amount of snow and it's pretty cold all winter! I've lived here most of my life though and I wouldn't have wanted to grow up anywhere else!
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