It's unbelievable how expensive it is to attend a university in the United States. Here in China, the government provides various scholarships to help cover university fees. From a bachelor’s degree to a master’s project and a PhD, all the fees I paid to the school were refunded to me through monthly scholarships. The United States really mistreated yall people. Now, with China’s economy at a low point, society is struggling to provide enough jobs for new graduates. To mitigate unemployment among recent graduates, the Chinese government is approving and encouraging more students to pursue higher degrees. While this may lead to degree inflation, I still believe that we can gain many valuable skills in school. Best of luck to you all!
For perspective, I have a master's degree from Harvard, and I also have an MBA from a smaller university. My opinion is that *YOU* should not go for a graduate degree. If you've tried multiple times without finishing, why would a new program be different? Going to school has both a financial cost and an opportunity cost of the time you spend studying. You're not leveraging the education you have now so why add more? I think you'd be far better off using your time to teach students rather than become a student yourself to learn more. There are options that have an incredibly low barrier to entry such as being a substitute teacher or a classroom aid. This would earn some money, and it would build experience toward landing other jobs teaching math. If those aren't an option, I'd suggest looking into volunteering at a non-profit or public high school. Ideally this could be in your local area to build contacts, network, and get references. Even volunteering a couple hours per week would give you experience that you could talk about for job interviews.
Washington univ stL. Very impressive. I was looking at that Hopkins Masters too but I think it was the computational economics MS. I've been outside school for very long time & believe a program like that would crush me.
I took a few grad level online courses from JHU and they were definitely not worth the cost. I am lucky my company paid for them though. An MSEE in my case is just a check mark. I have interviewed EEs with JHU online MSEEs and was not surprised they didn’t know much. It’s not the degree it’s the person as they say. Have you tried applying for entry level engineering positions at DoD contractors they sometimes hire math undergrads and train them on the engineering?
I got my dual citizenship recently and one of my bucket list goals is to attain a PhD for personal enrichment purposes. I’m already retired in my mid-40s. I’m not pursuing higher education for a job.
Master's degree is worth it if you can 1. demonstrate you're capable on following through on something, 2. demonstrate mastery and 3. demonstrate continued interest in staying a leader in the field. The university system is notorious for letting through subpar students. Fortunately in this case the chaff was successfully separated from the wheat. We all know why you're doing Uber eats buddy. If I can offer you any legitimate advice... You are suffering from delusions of grandeur. Employers look at your CV and know instantly that you can't complete anything. Life and business is about making as many good decisions as possible and spending your efforts in activities with measures of success and being successful in them. Do yourself a favor for once... deactivate your youtube, turn off social media, and put your nose to the grindstone. The sad thing is that your are so self-absorbed, so attention seeking that this advice will fall deaf on your ears. By the way, your math videos aren't even good.
It's crazy seeing that Karens are commenting on TH-cam and not just bitching at grocery stores lol. This person sounds like a miserable weasel who has never accomplished anything so is forced to make spiteful TH-cam comments lol. Rob K I used your math videos and they helped me and I appreciate your review about the John Hopkins Masters computational mathematics program. Keep up the good work!
@ Reality check: I have an advanced degree which matches my profession. Good advice is good advice whether you recognize that or not. Why are you feeding his delusion? Rob’s math videos are not good. You would know that if you’ve, in your words, “accomplished anything”. His evaluation of the math program at JHU is ill informed. Seems he couldn’t actually do the math on that one lmfao. Also why did you just invent a personality profile on me? That’s really weird.
It's unbelievable how expensive it is to attend a university in the United States. Here in China, the government provides various scholarships to help cover university fees. From a bachelor’s degree to a master’s project and a PhD, all the fees I paid to the school were refunded to me through monthly scholarships. The United States really mistreated yall people. Now, with China’s economy at a low point, society is struggling to provide enough jobs for new graduates. To mitigate unemployment among recent graduates, the Chinese government is approving and encouraging more students to pursue higher degrees. While this may lead to degree inflation, I still believe that we can gain many valuable skills in school. Best of luck to you all!
Master degrees is needing for cybersecurity. Starting my MS in CyberSec Management. So many people in cyber don’t know anything about Cyber.
For perspective, I have a master's degree from Harvard, and I also have an MBA from a smaller university.
My opinion is that *YOU* should not go for a graduate degree. If you've tried multiple times without finishing, why would a new program be different?
Going to school has both a financial cost and an opportunity cost of the time you spend studying. You're not leveraging the education you have now so why add more?
I think you'd be far better off using your time to teach students rather than become a student yourself to learn more. There are options that have an incredibly low barrier to entry such as being a substitute teacher or a classroom aid. This would earn some money, and it would build experience toward landing other jobs teaching math.
If those aren't an option, I'd suggest looking into volunteering at a non-profit or public high school. Ideally this could be in your local area to build contacts, network, and get references. Even volunteering a couple hours per week would give you experience that you could talk about for job interviews.
Washington univ stL. Very impressive. I was looking at that Hopkins Masters too but I think it was the computational economics MS. I've been outside school for very long time & believe a program like that would crush me.
I took a few grad level online courses from JHU and they were definitely not worth the cost. I am lucky my company paid for them though. An MSEE in my case is just a check mark. I have interviewed EEs with JHU online MSEEs and was not surprised they didn’t know much. It’s not the degree it’s the person as they say. Have you tried applying for entry level engineering positions at DoD contractors they sometimes hire math undergrads and train them on the engineering?
I got my dual citizenship recently and one of my bucket list goals is to attain a PhD for personal enrichment purposes. I’m already retired in my mid-40s. I’m not pursuing higher education for a job.
Master's degree is worth it if you can 1. demonstrate you're capable on following through on something, 2. demonstrate mastery and 3. demonstrate continued interest in staying a leader in the field. The university system is notorious for letting through subpar students. Fortunately in this case the chaff was successfully separated from the wheat. We all know why you're doing Uber eats buddy.
If I can offer you any legitimate advice... You are suffering from delusions of grandeur. Employers look at your CV and know instantly that you can't complete anything. Life and business is about making as many good decisions as possible and spending your efforts in activities with measures of success and being successful in them. Do yourself a favor for once... deactivate your youtube, turn off social media, and put your nose to the grindstone. The sad thing is that your are so self-absorbed, so attention seeking that this advice will fall deaf on your ears.
By the way, your math videos aren't even good.
It's crazy seeing that Karens are commenting on TH-cam and not just bitching at grocery stores lol. This person sounds like a miserable weasel who has never accomplished anything so is forced to make spiteful TH-cam comments lol. Rob K I used your math videos and they helped me and I appreciate your review about the John Hopkins Masters computational mathematics program. Keep up the good work!
@ Reality check: I have an advanced degree which matches my profession. Good advice is good advice whether you recognize that or not.
Why are you feeding his delusion? Rob’s math videos are not good. You would know that if you’ve, in your words, “accomplished anything”. His evaluation of the math program at JHU is ill informed. Seems he couldn’t actually do the math on that one lmfao.
Also why did you just invent a personality profile on me? That’s really weird.
Do Degree for independence not for the outcome !
A degree is a kind of trap. A false goal that sucks money and gives the soul nothing. You should forgive yourself for not falling into that trap.
Your speaking skills are fine for a quant. Focus on your stregths. Who cares what others think. Tell that other guy he needs to improve his math..😂
It is worth it.. but it’s only worth it in the hands of the right person. You need to improve your speaking skills bro
You need to improve your math skills bruh. Don't tell a quant to improve public speaking, hes doing ok. You stupid?
He's made like 50 vids on this just hoping to blow up and profit off of it. It's just doomer shit posting for clicks.
A Masters Degree Is Definitely Worth It Bro. Thanks, I Hope Finish College AsWell.
In America You Get A Couple Things
You Get
School
You Get
House
You Get
Vacation Time
No it's not