|
|
Info.GradSchools.com
»»
Planning for Post Education
»» Continuing education
Post graduate continuing education
No one would argue that earning a graduate degree is one of the best ways to ensure a good salary and professional satisfaction through a career in a field that you enjoy. But it is not the only route to those goals, and there are some occasions when post-graduate work is important as well. In fact, sometimes continuing your education even after you have earned a masters or a doctorate is necessary to move into the specific field in which you desire to work.
Mandatory Continuing Education Professions that require licensing, like teaching, medicine and physical fitness instruction, almost universally require that licensees accrue a specific number of continuing ed credits each year. This is the one major way to ensure that everyone practicing is up to date on the latest issues affecting their field of work. And even fields that do not necessarily require continuing education often place a high level of importance on it. Any sort of medical or dental specialty will require that you engage in post-grad work in order to hone your skills. For while your time in medical or dental school will give you overall expertise in the field, you will have to go for special training in order to work in cardiology or periodontology, for example. The skills relevant to those fields are just too specific to be adequately covered in the more generalized programs that graduate schooling provides. It's true that many doctors or dentists in general practices make excellent livings and experience a high level of job satisfaction without needing the extra training, but in order to perform more specific tasks professionally, a further level of schooling is required. When you consider continuing your education, keep in mind that post-graduate work is not quite like work was in graduate school. For while there is a good deal of studying, much of the class work is likely to either happen in situ-while you are on the job-or in seminars, during which time all of the professors and students will have a chance to work through the issues that they have encountered as a group. So though it may seem daunting to go through yet another level of education, it is not really like any other educational experience you've had before. And that makes it easier and more exciting.
Reality Check Many law school graduates, for example, find themselves in programs that will not only make them better lawyers, but that also afford them the opportunity to increase the breadth of their specific area of knowledge. For example, some lawyers earn an M.B.A. in order to make them better corporate lawyers, and some get degrees in biology in order to better represent their biotech clients. No matter how long you have been practicing in your field, it is always wise to keep your eyes open for further educational possibilities that could potentially make you better and more valuable at your job. The truth is this: If you are serious about being the best you can be in your specific field, and if you want to make sure that you are as capable as possible, then grad school will not be the end of your education. Rather, it will merely be the end of one specific kind of education. But the learning never stops. And that's a benefit to everyone. |