Академический Документы
Профессиональный Документы
Культура Документы
Org General Medicine/Surgery Humane Organization Laboratory 121 49,314 643 233 56 774
132 600
2,821
Membership Assn/Profssional So Missionary/Service Non-Veterinary Employment Not Employed Other Pharmaceutical/Biological Production Medicine Public Health Commission Corps Referral/Specialty Medicine 2,154 State, Federal Temp Not Employed in Vet Field Veterinary Medical College/School Veterinary Science Department Veterinary Technician Program Wildlife Zoo/Aquarium 937
4,805 62
Total
89,497
SALARIOS
Practica privada: 80-90 k anual 45 a 55 horas por semana Industria: 140 Academia, federales: +/- 100 En uniforme: +/- 90 mas beneficios Especializacion = 20 a 40 adicionales
Links to Institutions Offering Undergraduate Summer Research Programs www.the-aps.org/education/ugsrf/sumreslinks.htm Summer Undergraduate Internship Program (SUIP) at Upenn
The SUIP application is due February 1. The program begins June 4th and ends August 10th. The stipend is $3,900, and on-campus housing
A majority of Ph.D. candidates get support from their departments in return for teaching or research duties; they don't have to borrow. But most would-be doctors, dentists, veterinarians, lawyers and pharmacists borrow heavily, graduating with an average of $100,000 or more in debt, only to earn widely varying paybacks. According to FinAid.org, only 40% of Ph.D. candidates borrow and those who do take on average debt of $36,917. Good thing their debt is low. True, Ph.D.s who rise to the rank of full professors do well, earning an average of $118,444, according to the American Association of University Professors. But those cushy jobs are hard to get; most aspiring college teachers these days end up in non-tenure-track positions, earning less than half what professors make. What about professional schools? On the low end, the Association of American Veterinary Colleges reports new vets graduate with a median debt of $103,573. Yet the median earnings of vets in 2007 was just $75,230, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The American Veterinary Medical Association reports slightly higher income; it says private practitioners had a median income of $91,000 in 2007. Either way, that's only a fraction of what people docs make, and less even than pharmacists earn. Medical students take on a somewhat higher debt load--an average of $139,517, according to the American Medical School Association. But the payback appears better, particularly in certain specialties. The Medical Group Management Association reports primary care physicians earned a median of $182,322 in 2007, while specialists earned a median of $332,450, with cardiologists, radiologists and gastroenterologists all above $400,000.