Just curious if your company helps pay for your continuing education and also how they go about this.
One Better... The state of California paid for my continued education...
Ayup. I take a few courses a year and the boss picks up the tab.
As long as I can show that it is work related and I pass it goes on the company tab
Yep. They not only pay 100% - including textbooks/class materials,
they can get downright cranky if you don't keep taking a few classes every year.
I like my job so I can't complain too loud -
Currently converting passenger MD-10's & 11's into freighters for ups, fedex, etc.
http://www.boeing.com/commercial/
On occasion....they get bent when the class yo take that they paid for allows you to get a better job someplace else....go figure.....
They pay for it, but if I leave the company before serving out 12months after the class.. then I pay for the class. It is not pro-rated.
We are a ProMetric testing center and I have access to ALL computer related study guides.
B
The boss says,"you need to take a surveying class so look for a local college so you can start ASAP!"
One month later he asks,"so are we reembursing you for your class?"
Then I said,"don't worry about it boss, I just put it all on the company credit card including the books!"
I had suggested this college gig three months prior due to the possible future need of it on these $100Million+ jobs we are getting.
I takes care of me bro and inversly you takes care of youins!!
Don't know my company's current education policy although they seem to follow the Government's rulings on tax-exempt expenditures. If an education program is tax-exempt, they offer it.
Luckily I got my MSEE paid for in its entirety including books through the company. Of course I graduated in 1988 so things have sure changed since then.
Here's a couple of Bell Telephone Laboratories education programs that have gone by the wayside (along with BTL):
OYOC:
One Year On Campus: Graduate with your BSEE or BSME, get hired in June, work until September, then go to a university for a year to get your Masters degree. USC and Georgia Tech were popular schools. Get reduced salary and all expenses for school paid for including several trips back home.
LUPT:
Local University Part Time: This is what I did for my MSEE. Work and go to school part time at a local university. Local to me was Lehigh University in Bethlehem, PA. Got up to 3 days a week off of work to attend classes.
Spoke
We have paid training. Its done here in Dallas at the Maint. Training center. If you are from out of town they pay your regular hours, travel, hotel, and give you $35 per day to eat on. If you are a local guy you buy your own food and drive yourself to training But you still get paid.
Well...let's see...where do I begin? First off, my company has fired 20% of it's employees and filed bankruptcy last year...chopping all it's employee's pay anywhere between 20-50%., degraded our once decent health insurance to a catastrophic plan with a $400 deductable, froze our pensions for 5 years...(pensions will be eliminated no doubt), and overall... brought our compensation package backwards to what I made when Madonna recorded her first album. So to answer your question, my POS company won't be paying for continuing education any day soon. (I am on a leave of absense...and really don't have any plans to go back...guess who I worked for?)
Yes my company pays, You just need to maintain a better than B average to get full reimbursement, C average gets you 75% etc.
Also you have to get approval prior to taking a class, and it must be a class that has to do with engineering.
To my knowledge no one has ever been denied this perk.
Yup, if I go to an accreditted school and take a class that is either relevant to my job or part of a degree program and pass with a C or better, they pay 100% of all costs.
Yes indeed,
Paid for my 2nd BFA (4200/yr max, I had to pick up the rest) and then gave ma a promotion.
Mark
land surveying? a reaaaally fun subject. just finished up my classes.... i am leaning toward the surveying/geospatial minor for civil engineering...
[/quote]
Civ kicks ass and so many job ops after graduating!! Good choice bro and I also enjoy my surveying class. I already know how to do it but this gets me one step passed the norm of whats out the as far as how much the field people really know about the trade. Most surveyors are just going through the moves and don't have an in depth knowledge of what they are doing. They just give the data to the engineer in house who makes the real money. In a few years, all this will be GPS based and field people will be eliminated to a select few.
Education rocks!!!
[quote name='JPB' date='Oct 7 2006, 08:32 AM' post='789595']
land surveying? a reaaaally fun subject. just finished up my classes.... i am leaning toward the surveying/geospatial minor for civil engineering...
[/quote]
Civ kicks ass and so many job ops after graduating!! Good choice bro and I also enjoy my surveying class. I already know how to do it but this gets me one step passed the norm of whats out the as far as how much the field people really know about the trade. Most surveyors are just going through the moves and don't have an in depth knowledge of what they are doing. They just give the data to the engineer in house who makes the real money. In a few years, all this will be GPS based and field people will be eliminated to a select few.
Education rocks!!!
[/quote]
yep.. we are already using GPS based trimble units
I can take up to 6 graduate credits a year, and work picks it up 100%.
Of course, I work for a college...
Zach
Man, I can't even get mgmt to pay my mileage from when I had to goto Hurst both times. Or spend my board approved budget. Took three weeks to get approval to buy $78 worth of "tape transport cases"... Hell, I tried to re-arrange my budget, drop off a $29k Citrix server (that they admitt they don't plan on letting my buy this year anyways) and buy a $3,000K test bed for Citrix alternatives, internal vulnrability scans, and testing a push e-mail system for cell phones. Too much financial risk... It's not like we're gonna make much under 2 mil this year....
It did take three years, but they agreed to reimburse me for any certification I take and pass.... I don't make enough to buy books and take the tests though....
I was working on my MBA when I started, but between working late and the school moving class times around, I only finished six hours...
Anybody wanna buy a '96 Impala?
Hmmm... This one job in DFW looks mighty fine right about now..
My last employer said full time employees can get paid to go to conferences and get accredited in some things. For instance, if I wanted to learn German, the company would have paid for it. Or if I wanted to take a class in machining, I could have gotten it paid for. Even motorsports conferences (Claude Roulle, etc.) would have been paid for if I was a full time employee.
Many universities will pay you to get your masters and phd. I know at UCI, if you are interested in grad school, you can get paid up to 30k a year to work for the university. You get paid for the work as a TA and in the labs on top of taking classes. I know thats true in the physical sciences and engineering at some schools, but I dont know about an MBA or law.
the wife's company paid 100% for law school, gave her four hours off per week to study, gave her a bonus when she finished, then laid her off.
She's not an engineer anymore.
WOW! 15 year old zombie thread.....
In my former career, my employer had a continuing education incentive of $2,500 a year towards books/tuition and I could take 4 hours per week of paid time off for schooling. Now that was 30 years ago when $2,500 went a long way for tuition and books. I took advantage of it for 10 years, attending real brick and mortar universities earning my under-graduate, graduate and post-graduate degrees while working full-time. Well worth it.
My wife’s job paid for her RN degree, masters and then specialized practice accreditations. Her current job pays for anything she wants that will help her do her job along with housing and other stuff.
Whether or not your employer pays for your education, it’s always a good investment.
There are a number of us here that work for big technology companies and the answer to your question is yes, not perhaps as extensively as before but ob-going education in pursuit of advanced degrees is generally both supported and subsidized. Oracle helped with my MBA tuition.
I work for an industrial supply distributor. If you want a bachelor's or a master's from any school you can get into they will pay for it 100%. If you can get into USC they'll pay for it.
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