StevePerryHair wrote:yulog wrote:Angiekay wrote:RossValoryRocks wrote:Angiekay wrote:[Yeah...but they make a TON more than teachers do...it takes 20+ years to get to the $70K-$80/yr range in the teaching profession...you can step out off college in other fields and in some cases make that much .
A nurse in Pittsburgh right now steps out of school in a $25/hr job...long hours for sure, but they are well ahead of what a first year teach makes.
Baloney. My boyfriend just graduated with a surgical tech degree. After working the past two months for NOTHING while be does his clinicals, he'll be working 4, 12 hour days and every other weekend on call...making $32,000.
oops.
A surgical tech is a low level position in a hospital ,most of those courses are between 1yr to 15 months, hardly equivalent to a teachers 4-6 years of education, and not at the same level as a nurses education either.Any job with the word tech or aide at the end of it is not going to pay well in the medical field.(unfortunate but that is reality)
And why is that? Cause I was a Medical Technologist (tech) and I had 4 years of college taking the same courses as the pre-med students were. I had to spend 12 months living at a hospital on rotations in the lab while taking very hard classes on not only the lab tests we would run, but what these tests are used to diagnose, what chemicals are in each test, etc. It was basically a mini-med school. In fact, you can enter straight into med school from that field. And we got and still get paid crap compared to other health field careers with even less education and much easier science courses. What is it about that "tech" word. Med Techs fall under the "pathology" part of a hospital, and I know people used to blame it on that. That the pathologists never fought hard enough for us to get what we deserved for our education and hard work. We are the workers that no one sees, so it's hard to be appreciated.
Its just the way of the world i guess, the term tech or aide was used to decipher between people who were considered to be professionals and someone who wasn't,Theres always a pecking order, and when i said that the scrubb tech was a low level job in the hospital setting(I didnt mean it was low class but it may of came off that way I apologize to Angie and anyone who took it that way I was trying to just make the point of pay/years of education.
Oh,by the way you can go into medical school with an english degree, most people did to boost there GPA,so i dont know if the med tech really has any pull to get you in...it sure helps to be in the field if you want to be an M.D., but it isn't a necessity.
The other thing to look at is college is a money making business,it's buyer beware...you can be a med tech in less than a year,but college will be more than happy to take your money for 4 years and give you the same certification.......it sucks, but this is very common.
Theres no guarantees anymore, college doesnt get you high paying jobs, unless you specialize, and even then you have to keep up on trends and see what jobs are hot at the time you plan to graduate.








