Thank goodness I am finished.... 12-14 years.... I am in the medical field. I would like to add a few things.....
I agree with realist26.... however I am not sure about the doctor / dentist part due to oBummacare. I will get to that shortly....
Do not go to a private school unless you can justify it with certainty. If you will earn significantly more or be able to get a better job. In my field it is not really a factor. I have had only a few (less than 10 in almost 10 years) ask where I went to school and I think that was just because of college football.
Go to a state funded university with as few liberal instructors as possible, they will drive you insane. I was accepted to Boston University but did not go, it would have been around 30k per year as opposed to about 8k per year at my state funded university. After graduating and working with others, I began to see that I actually learned more and was exposed to more than many others who attended very expensive and prestigious private schools. Our graduating class scored highest in the nation on national board exams. You become known for YOU and your work, not for the school you attended. Patients value your personality and compassion more than anything (that is if you are even half way competent).
Ask around and find out where to take classes and who to take them from.
***** Concentrate on passing exams and making as good a grade as possible***** School is a game, you have to learn to play it and succeed. Focus on what you think they want you to know for exams. In reality, it is all about grade point average and exam scores (as far as the school is concerned). This is more important than learning, I am totally serious. You will inevitably learn but if you are going on to a graduate program you can learn what you need to know from prep courses.... (MCAT, DAT, GRE, LSAT, etc) in order to be accepted. Also, if going to a graduate program, invest in a prep course (not just books) like Kaplan before you take the entrance exam. You can learn AFTER YOU GET IN to the graduate program, everything you need to know should be taught at that point.
Make sure your chosen field of study is one that pays well and that you can easily find a job doing. Also, make sure it is something that not just anyone could do. If everyone gets the same idea as you, and they are able to act on it that will mean fewer jobs.
Admission committees (from what I have seen, I could be wrong)..... An A from any legitimate college or university is as good as an A from an extremely difficult school....
Example.... I took Organic Chemistry as an accelerated summer course, in 10 (or12) weeks we completed the whole year. That alone made it very difficult but on top of that I took it at Georgia Tech which made it even more difficult... I made a B, and it was very difficult. I would have been better off getting an A from a regular course (not accelerated) from any accredited school even though that would have been much easier to attain.
I will not get into pay, but I will say it has been declining gradually for a year or more. I work with medicaid, medicare, and all sorts of government funded plans along with traditional insurance and cash patients. oBumma care will drive many traditional insurance programs out of business. Government programs are getting to the point where they barely cover operating expenses, some procedures actually cost more to perform than the reimbursement you get for doing it... you LOSE money. However, if you don't participate you lose a large number of patients. The reimbursement fees are continuing to decline and will take a huge decline when oBumma care comes into effect. My cousin is a psychiatrist, he recently closed his established practice for fear of going bankrupt.
True situation....I am being told by medicaid that they will only pay for X (example), however X is not up to the level of standard care. I can be reprimanded by the state medical board for doing what they are saying to do. If I perform X procedure as is standard of care, I won't get a penny from medicaid. If I perform Y as medicaid is telling me, I will get a small pay but will be doing a great disservice to the patient and could potentially be sued or reprimanded by the state board of medical examiners. There would be NO defense since you do what YOU know should be done and NOT as dictated by anyone else... they could care less what medicaid or anyone will or won't pay for.
For reasons above, I am not sure the medical field is a good choice.... but if you are like me, it is the only choice. I had to do it no matter if I got paid or not, I just hate being taken advantage of... and contrary to what many may think I do not make a fortune, especially when working hours are taken into consideration. I feel I am payed more than I deserve based on me, however based on what some other morons are being payed I am not so sure. I thought about graduate study in physics, I loved physics but was told the job market wasn't that great.
I have heard tech schools are great in this economy. Few want to go to tech school (apparently) but they are teaching trades that you can get work doing. Example... welders can find jobs rather easily and are making appx. 80k per year. Machinists and a lot of other skilled trades are very hard to find in the US, one reason a lot of tech companies are going to India.
Not sure if this rambling even makes sense.... typed here and there at different times since last night.