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My daughter is going to college and wants to earn at lease a masters or bachelors degree in computer programming/computer science. I've heard that she would only make 4 to 5 thousand a month. Or about 50/60 thousand a year. I know it depends on experience, too. But how is someone fresh out of college supposed to get experience if nobody will hire her? Would she do better living and working, let's say in England or Ireland? If not, then maybe Canada? Maybe the market would be more open? What do you all think? Thanks for your help.

2007-01-15 18:40:37 · 5 answers · asked by Gayle 4 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

5 answers

She could always try to go to a college where she can get work experience in a c-op program like Drexell university. She could also do an internship or work study that would act as work experiance. Or she could try a study abroad program where she can actually go over seas to sea if she likes it first.. There are lots of different options. I think a master's is a smart move. Especially if she gets the Master's at a well known college. The whole thing would be less expensive if she went a state college for the bachelors. I would try to work on the internship however if she can't find a co-op program that she likes.

2007-01-15 18:51:52 · answer #1 · answered by katchoo_792 3 · 0 0

Your daughter can get computer experience working in the computer lab at school and doing internships during the summer. It's not necessary to go abroad. Going abroad would not hurt her chances because it shows her ability to work with people from different backgrounds, but it's not necessary. Plus making 50-60 thousand is not a bad starting salary by any means.

2007-01-15 18:52:36 · answer #2 · answered by MISS KNIGHT 5 · 0 0

wherever she goes, having a degree will only help her. In general a bachelors degree is the standard level that a lot of places require. She may find herself worse off in a foreign market too-hard to say!

2007-01-15 18:50:33 · answer #3 · answered by churnin 4 · 0 0

I appears like your spouse can petition for you and your toddler. It does no longer sound like the youngster derived U.S. citizenship by the mother, yet that question might want to be settled with fact on the consulate/embassy. in case your spouse in no way lived in the U.S., any toddler she had does no longer be a U.S. citizen at beginning. Your spouse desires to start up the multi-stepped technique of immigrating by filing form I-130 on the nearest U.S. consulate in the U.ok. She likely will favor to record 2 petitions plus the cost and the assisting files.

2016-11-24 20:42:01 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

She shouldn't earn her masters at lease, that can be expensive to buy back at the end of the lease.

2007-01-15 18:46:28 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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