This year my institution will require approximately one entire week of pay per quarter in fees. This must be paid in full by about the 3rd week of the quarter. Despite my being paid from a grant, which covers my salary and tuition costs, the fees must come from my own pocket. This totals almost a month of pay per year given to the University, simply for the pleasure being employed here and signing up for 10 credits of "independent research" each quarter.
Unlike some of my constituents, I'm not terribly bothered about the low wages we're paid. I generally make a livable wage, and the unofficial benefits of my job are enormous. Indeed, many of my friends who make 4x more at great companies would be envious of the daily freedom, travel abilities, and satisfaction that comes with getting a PhD. To be fair though, wee regularly hear from incoming grad students that UW has the lowest offer of pay from any institution they were accepted to. Ouch.
But there's something absurd about having to give such a huge portion of my living stipend back for "fees". I don't have data on hand about the history of fees at UW, or the cost of living in seattle (though I can say that rent is at least double what it was when I first moved here). I'd love if someone could point me to such data, though!
So there you go, that's approximately how much money you can expect to make as a grad student in astronomy at UW these days. Be prepared to give a large chunk of it back though... Here's a couple relevant PhD Comics on the subject: Unemployment vs Grad Stipends, and Academic Salaries
I seriously invite some discussion on the subject. Got any data on typical earning profiles as a function of age in industry? Can you point me to some cost of living data, or history of fees/tuition at UW (or other schools)?
Update:
A friend of mine in Atmospheric Sciences PhD program sent me their version of my plot for comparison:
Here is the per quarter cost of U PASS since I first became affiliated with the UW
A good friend just reminded me of this interesting blog post on grad school & tuition
ReplyDeleteTry this one on for "conflict of interest"... the CEO/president of my masters program suddenly "has always had" the responsibility to approve or deny transfer credit. He started denying my pre-approved transfers from UCLA and now I'm paying out for non-native instructors to stumble through slideshows on medical courses such as Neurophysiology. The difference in costs is upwards of $4000. The difference in quality is priceless.
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