(no subject)
Apr. 4th, 2008 05:56 pmI AM SO TIRED.
Note to self: never compare grad school experiences with anyone else until you finish the Master's. Because there is NOTHING more demoralizing than talking to someone who started hers a year after you did, is still working full-time, is taking a 42-credit Master's while yours is 36 and blithely talks about taking 4 class (read: 12 credit) semesters and how she'll be done in December. Nothing.
How the hell do you take a 12-credit semester and work full time without basically dumping half your work on other people? How? I want her secret.
Note to self: never compare grad school experiences with anyone else until you finish the Master's. Because there is NOTHING more demoralizing than talking to someone who started hers a year after you did, is still working full-time, is taking a 42-credit Master's while yours is 36 and blithely talks about taking 4 class (read: 12 credit) semesters and how she'll be done in December. Nothing.
How the hell do you take a 12-credit semester and work full time without basically dumping half your work on other people? How? I want her secret.
no subject
Date: 2008-04-04 11:46 pm (UTC)I am not one of these people. I tried working "full time" (32 hours) and taking 12 credits and school and had a nervous breakdown. I can't do it. This is why I haven't gone back to school and probably never will. Even if I could afford school, I can't (mentally) afford to give up that much down-time.
no subject
Date: 2008-04-05 03:29 am (UTC)Yeah, the full time in this example is a 40-hour week. Also, last I checked, she was a pretty heavy partier. I don't know, maybe we got our wires crossed and I misheard her on the four classes thing. Maybe she meant for the year, which makes more sense. Of course, she's getting an MBA while I'm getting an MS, so maybe that's part of it? I don't know.
I'm finishing my Master's, hell yes - after this semester I'll have 24 credits under my belt, half of which my employers paid for and I don't have to reimburse them, and 9 more left to go. If I could pull it off, I'd love to just take two online courses in the fall, because that eliminates group projects and the work is heavy but manageable and quantifiable and I can break it down and do some work ahead of time (none of this "hey, pick some random paper topic on something related to the subject of this course you don't know anything about yet - OH but it has to be under 12 pages!" crap).
Honestly, looking back on it? Had I known then what I know now, I'd have gotten smart and applied for the ONLINE Master's program. Seriously. You get a better heads-up on what the course will be like beforehand so you know to double up or not. I'd have doubled last fall if I'd known Dr. C was so lazy, and word-of-mouth saved me from doubling up with Systems Design and Analysis last spring - and if I'd tried to take another course along with that one? HOO BOY. Good class, but I'd probably have wound up in the hospital from a nervous breakdown if I tried to take anything else with it. Also, the fact that it's an online course reduces the chance of group projects since a lot of the students need distance learning and there may not be any chance of face-to-face interaction.
Some of my classes have been really good. That System Design class I spent last spring pulling my hair out over? Stressful as hell, but a good class that I've caught myself applying principles from throughout the design phase of the Big Damn Project at work. And while Dr. R was sort of a flake, once he decided on his discussion grading system, Health Informatics was pretty interesting too. So is this class (Applications of Intelligent Systems), and I like the prof and thus am even madder at myself for blowing the midterm - but everything else is just piling up.
no subject
Date: 2008-04-05 03:47 am (UTC)