2. About your facilitator:
CEO/Founder, The Youth Career Coach Inc.
Certified Professional Career Coach (PARW/CC)
Education Consultant, Encompass Solutions
CONTACT
Faculty: Northeastern University, Suffolk
University, and University of Rhode Island Office: 617-942-2861
Email:
Board of Directors, Dimock Community Health info@theyouthcareercoach.com
Center
Facebook: www.facebook.com/
Education includes: BA in Image Consulting, MBA natascha.saunders
in Global Business, MS in Leadership, Executive
Certificate in Leadership, Certified Career LinkedIn:
www.linkedin.com/in/
Coach, currently working on Doctorate in nataschasaunders
Education
Former Employers include: BU, MIT
Sloan, JWU, A.G. Edwards & Sons Inc. , Wells
Fargo, State Street, Neiman Marcus, Beth Israel
Hospital, Roxbury Public Defenders
3. What we’ll discuss….
1. What is continuing education
2. Why continue your education
3. When is a good time to start preparing
4. How do you prepare
5. Benefits
6. Ask The Career Coach
4. What is Continuing Your Education
is an all-encompassing term within a broad spectrum
of post-secondary learning activities and programs.
The term is used mainly in the United States and
Canada. Recognized forms of post-secondary
learning activities within the domain include: degree
credit courses by non-traditional students, non-
degree career training, workforce training, formal
personal enrichment courses (both on-campus and
online) self-directed learning (such as through
Internet interest groups, clubs or personal research
activities) and experiential learning as applied to
problem solving.
5. Why Pursue Higher Education
What are your thoughts on why?
To keep your skills and knowledge base current
Reducing employment limitations
Self Achievement | Personal Satisfaction
Enhanced traits such as: Discipline
It takes great discipline to study properly, avoiding
procrastination and preparing adequate notes and study
aids each week. It also takes great discipline to distill
months of knowledge.
Money | Prestige
7. INCOME
According to a report from the U.S. Census Bureau.
The report titled "The Big Payoff: Educational
Attainment and Synthetic Estimates of Work-Life
Earnings" (.pdf) reveals that over an adult's working
life, high school graduates can expect, on average, to earn
$1.2 million; those with a bachelor's degree, $2.1 million;
and people with a master's degree, $2.5 million.
Persons with doctoral degrees earn an average of $3.4
million during their working life, while those with
professional degrees are around $4.4 million.
8. When is a good time to prepare
Your thoughts?
Now! I don’t believe there will ever be a good time.
Example:
Fire in our home
My brother in my MBA Program
When you’ve notice the jobs you have an interest in
require a degree
When you notice the people you want to do business
with have degrees (People like to do business with people they know or have something in
common.)
9. How do you prepare?
1. What are some tools that you’ve used to prepare?
2. Self Analysis
3. Leadership and Peer Analysis (Biographies)
4. Talk to your career coach (NFL)
5. Family Inventory | Time Management | Resources
6. Work flexibility | Corporation Culture
7. Attend an open house and orientation
8. Research
About the Schools
Regarding Academic Programs
Online or OnCampus or Both
10. How do you prepare
cont.
8. Meet with admissions, registrar, career services,
meet the dean
9. Financial Aid Meeting | FAFSA
10. Books where to purchase them (used, library
reserve, friend takes course different terms)
11. Meet with past schools attended
11. Benefits
1. What are the benefits?
2. Consider the social and cultural benefits, for instance:
making friends, learning social rules and norms and
understanding civic roles.
3. Some of the most sought-after benefits from education
are economic. For example, specialized knowledge and
technical skills, for example, lead to higher
incomes, greater productivity and generation of
valuable ideas.
4. Educated people make more money in traditional
careers “except for the exceptions – idea
generators”
5. People respect people with education more than those
who don't
12. Benefits cont.
6. Having an education allows you to work in a field
that you enjoy
7. Have more stimulating conversations
8. Skill set such as writing | communication | team
work
9. Learn From Masters of your Field
Sure, many things learned in college can be learned at the
library. What you miss out on, however, is someone to put those
texts in context. Professors are hired because they're at the top
of their area of expertise. Of course they won't all be
goldmines, but when you find one, latch on. You'll learn more
than you'll find in any book.
13. My success & survival tips
Stayed at work vs. Stayed at home to study (Where?)
I used my current job as part of my research and papers –
opened doors to networking and expanded my knowledge
base
I read many organizational charts of employees in my
company & my competitors that went to the school I was
attending
I did a semester long internship from the school but used my
current job as the site it knocked out 1 whole term and I was
able to pitch and craft a special project for my job
My study groups were specifically selected by me – kids whose
parents sent them to school before they take over their family
business
14. SOCRATES once said that “the
more he learned, the more he
became convinced of his own
ignorance”.
How many of you are in school now? What are you taking? Anyone thinking about going back? Certificates, degrees, online training at work
Note: Data are for persons age 25 and over. Earnings are for full-time wage and salary workers. Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Current Population Survey. BLS has some data on the employment status of the civilian noninstitutional population 25 years and over by educational attainment, sex, race, and Hispanic origin online. The Census Bureau also has some data on the educational attainment online. http://www.bls.gov/emp/ep_chart_001.htm_________________MD - medicineDDS - dentistryJD - lawDVM - veterinary medicineMBA - businessMSE - engineeringand so on. They are typically focused on a particular kind of career. (Some of these can also be classed as doctoral degrees, of course.)A PhD is the traditional "academic" doctoral degree in arts or sciences. You go to grad school, take some classes, and, most important, do some independent work and write a dissertation that is (at least in theory) a work of original scholarship.
Tom Friedman’s NYTimes OpEd article January 25th, 2012 cited current unemployment statistics for those over 25: Less than high school 13.8%, high school grad 8.7%, some college 7.7%, college degree 4.1%.How I could use my degree to better market myself? $750 an hour for a webinar vs. my competitor