Computer Science / Law / Medical school?
ok, I just obtained a good-for-nothing, I-have-been-robbed by-my-university degree which is WORTHLESS. Its Business and Information Systems......anyways...I don't know what to do next but I have to do something because I need to fix my bad choice. Is either I enter the Computer Science master's program, apply for law or apply for medical school. Please take into account outsourcing so I dont know if CS will be a smart choice. Medical school for psychiatry (4 more years), Law School (3 years and english is not my native language) What would you choose? I can't decide, money is not a problem, time ? well , I am 33. I wanted to do CS so bad but now with the outsourcing going on I am confused, its sucks for real to be this way but I can NOT fix the market. I know it sounds like a teen but trust me I am like this (undecide) because of the outsourcing
Public Comments
- Medical school will be very rewarding i believe :). Just think of all the people you will beable to help and make a difference in there life
- Computer science isn't a bad choice. Yes there is outsourcing, but as long as there's promised job security you should be fine. Since you said computer science I'm guessing you want to be a programmer.
- We cannot decide this for you - you need to figure out what it is that brings you fulfillment in life. Comp Sci - getting a job shouldn't be a problem if you learned appropriate subject material in college. Remember, while you may feel "robbed" by your university, you made the course choices. Hopefully, you were a good student and learned what you needed. Having two brothers in comp sci (one MIT, the other Cornell), they have differing views of the efficacy of their education. I took the med school route. Remember it is not just 4 more years of med school, but then 3-4 years of psychiatry residency afterward. If you feel called to the field, do it. If you have other interests - do them instead. They time, energy, and financial sacrifice of medical training is significant. The internal rewards of changing the course of lives are wonderful, but challenging. Law school I cannot directly comment on, but it would require less time/money. It also gives you many career options afterward. As long as you can navigate the difficulties of English as a 2nd language, you will do fine.
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