$0-$20,000/yr because your boss will ask for you to have certifications like boiler licenses and NATE/ASHRAE certification you can't even test for because they require YEARS of experience in the field which you'll never get because contractors only hire EXPERIENCED people... Glad I'm just wasting the state of Michigan's money getting this worthless 2 year degree, except I can't get the time I've spent on it back. My advice, be an apprentice millwright, pipefitter, plumber, electrician, or carpenter through a union. You won't make bank until you're a journeyman, but the reward is experience; which I feel far OUTWEIGHS any piece of paper any day. Plus despite the Right-to-Work/Right-Wing fables about labor unions, these ones will bend over backwards to keep you working to meet those thousands of man hours to make Journeyman. You don't get that guarantee from ANY college. I actually TURNED DOWN a millwright apprenticeship to go back to community college, big mistake. And why you ask? Because I didn't grow a pair and borrow the $750 in tool and dues cost to start a job that paid $17/hr WITH Blue Cross, visual, and dental. According to the Millwright who interviewed me in 2008, he said 3rd year apprentices made $60,000/yr, so guess how stupid I feel with a 3.9 G.P.A. and 9 years wasted in 4 colleges with NO degree or job experience in anything as a result? Don't believe the bold-faced marketed lie that a college degree is all you need to make bank, all you'll be is a more highly-credentialled sucker working for someone else the rest of your life if you're lucky in this economy. The most valuable thing you have is your healthiest years (18-30), which I've wasted most of; I'll be 29 IF I finish my worthless degree next May. Do whatever you have to to amass a stable work history and put off family or home ownership as long as you can, we've all seen the financial black holes they've turned into... Just focus on finding out what you want out of life instead of what the world tells you you're supposed to have. Let's face it, we're not going to be wunderkind billionaires, celebrities, or geniuses like our Sh*t Sandwich generation (D.O.B. 1979-1991) was promissed. If you're looking for a trade, STAY AWAY from HVACR. It's the only trade on Earth where entry-level means 2-5 years experience with credentials galore and there's no such thing as an apprenticeship. I swear to God, even working a road crew or roofing will leave you happier and more fulfilled than this trade, and I haven't worked one day in it because of the previously-stated myriad Catch-22's. Get yourself a turbine technician certification and you can work anything from a coal-plant to a wind farm. That's what I wish I did instead. Hope that answers your question, and for God's sake don't fall into this career/life beartrap that I have. -Wageslave Z-
It could mean the employer is requiring at a minimum of an associates degree for the posted job. It should have read simply as, "associates degree required."It could mean the employer is requiring at a minimum of an associates degree for the posted job. It should have read simply as, "associates degree required."It could mean the employer is requiring at a minimum of an associates degree for the posted job. It should have read simply as, "associates degree required."It could mean the employer is requiring at a minimum of an associates degree for the posted job. It should have read simply as, "associates degree required."It could mean the employer is requiring at a minimum of an associates degree for the posted job. It should have read simply as, "associates degree required."It could mean the employer is requiring at a minimum of an associates degree for the posted job. It should have read simply as, "associates degree required."
An associates degree or associates of applied sciences degree in veterinary technology in the US.
Typically, an associates in nursing is an associates in science degree (AS).Typically, an associates in nursing is an associates in science degree (AS).Typically, an associates in nursing is an associates in science degree (AS).Typically, an associates in nursing is an associates in science degree (AS).Typically, an associates in nursing is an associates in science degree (AS).Typically, an associates in nursing is an associates in science degree (AS).
It really depends on the subject area of the associates degree and whether or not vacancies are available. In terms of educational qualification, an associates degree comes in between a GED and a bachelor's degree. Therefore, an associates degree holder would be picked before a GED only holder.
Associates Degree
Associates degree is an undergraduate degree. The associates and bachelor's degrees are undergraduate degrees, The master's and doctorate degrees are graduate degrees.
Associates of Science degree in Business.Associates of Science degree in Business.Associates of Science degree in Business.Associates of Science degree in Business.Associates of Science degree in Business.Associates of Science degree in Business.
I hate how some applications don't have "Associates Degree" as an option. If you have an associates degree and you are filling out an application like that, you should write "Associates Degree in ____" on the side. I think that shows pride in your achievements, and you deserve to feel proud of getting an associates degree. "Some college" does not mean "associates degree". Someone who took 2 college classes could check "some college", and you took about 20. I agree with the above contributor. Applications should have a designation for the completion of an Associates degree. An Associates degree shows completion. There are Associates degrees as an Registered nurse, in Technology, Educating, multiple Allied Health fields, and the list goes on, and on, and on. As stated above, if it were me I would make sure I indicated the Associates degree on the application. Viper1
Typically, a degree with a major in Early Childhood Education is an associates of arts (A.A.)Typically, a degree with a major in Early Childhood Education is an associates of arts (A.A.)Typically, a degree with a major in Early Childhood Education is an associates of arts (A.A.)Typically, a degree with a major in Early Childhood Education is an associates of arts (A.A.)Typically, a degree with a major in Early Childhood Education is an associates of arts (A.A.)Typically, a degree with a major in Early Childhood Education is an associates of arts (A.A.)
all of the following are examples of associates degree except
Completion of high school or its equivalency. In other words, there is no other college degree that comes before an associates degree.
An associates degree is a 2 year degree you can obtain both online and on campus. Just about everything requires either your high school diploma or at least an associates degree. You can obtain the 2 year degree for just about any field of interest.