The Difficulty to Adjusting an abroad College and Choosing a Major
Obviously deciding to attend a university comes with a lot of challenges. Adjusting from the way high school classes operate to how university classes operate is always difficult for students. In my case I have not only to adapt to a new situation but also to playing in a Tennis team for my university. And studying in a foreign language.
Take, for instance, Eduardo Mena—a current senior at Tennessee Tech—who showed promise as a high school student and high rank tennis player. In fact, he “loved attending high school classes while playing his favorite sport", when he arrived at college he knew that “it was not going to be easy". Unfortunately, Mena started to recognize that college was “fundamentally different” than his high school. For example, he realized that students “actually needed to do the homework that college professors assign” and that they “don’t check up on you.” This is relevant because in high school, even though he considered herself studious, he would often do homework only if he “felt like it or had the time” because he realized that the teachers would either “cover all of the material in class anyway” or “give students who didn’t finish time to complete it in class, especially if a lot of students didn’t.” Thus, according to Mena, “there were no real dangers to procrastination.”
Mena had also to deal with his tennis trainings and compettitions and coping with all was going to be really chalenging for him. Eduardo Mena knew that: "My freshman year was going to be tough because I'm going to cope with three different goals". Thanks to the help of teacher’s advisers and Tennis team Mena has grown a lot in his Tennessee Tech University experience. " I had to put a lot of effort in order to achieve my present NCAA tennis ranking." and obtain my degree at the same time.
Take, for instance, Eduardo Mena—a current senior at Tennessee Tech—who showed promise as a high school student and high rank tennis player. In fact, he “loved attending high school classes while playing his favorite sport", when he arrived at college he knew that “it was not going to be easy". Unfortunately, Mena started to recognize that college was “fundamentally different” than his high school. For example, he realized that students “actually needed to do the homework that college professors assign” and that they “don’t check up on you.” This is relevant because in high school, even though he considered herself studious, he would often do homework only if he “felt like it or had the time” because he realized that the teachers would either “cover all of the material in class anyway” or “give students who didn’t finish time to complete it in class, especially if a lot of students didn’t.” Thus, according to Mena, “there were no real dangers to procrastination.”
Mena had also to deal with his tennis trainings and compettitions and coping with all was going to be really chalenging for him. Eduardo Mena knew that: "My freshman year was going to be tough because I'm going to cope with three different goals". Thanks to the help of teacher’s advisers and Tennis team Mena has grown a lot in his Tennessee Tech University experience. " I had to put a lot of effort in order to achieve my present NCAA tennis ranking." and obtain my degree at the same time.
Eduardo Mena has managed to be among the best thirty best college tennis players because of the good results he has achieved. He is considered one of the best athletes of the university. All this has led him that after this semester graduates, " I will stay at Tennessee Tech University for my master degree at the same time that I am going to be an assistant to the assistant coach". "I am also going to help others to achieve what I did". What Eduardo Mena has achieved is a very difficult and is available to very few people and an excellent college Staff. The easier decision for Mena was his Mayor in Business he really love the different matters that his mayor cover. Comming to a point " I love it as to continue wth an Master in Business Administration".
I will also use the experience of my actual assistant coach Rogerio Ribero. He graduated from East Tennessee State University and he was also in the tennis team. During his time in college, he achieved very good results ; he played number two for his team. The Tennessee Tech University tennis coach who knew him through his good results was the one who offered him the job where he is right now. Rogerio has also been a reference for this taugh year for me. Because he went over a similar chalenger experience.Rogerio says "Tennis has given me a lot "
Looking at figure one--- self-reported information that comes from moneynation.com---- Admission Council (GMAC), that is a nonprofit organization of leading graduate business schools conducts a survey of 800 corporate recruiters every year. That survey lists the median MBA starting salary at $100K a year. It also reports typical yearly pay for standard four-year bachelor’s program business graduates at $55,000 a year. That would mean a two-year MBA degree can nearly double a business school graduate’s annual salary. GMAC conducts an annual survey of 800 recruiters. Indeed lists 160,000 business admin jobs and 45,000 of them require MBAs. The MBA jobs have an average salary of $ 95,000. The jobs requiring only a BA average $ 65,000.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) puts the median pay for employees with MBA degrees at $118,000 a year. As figure one shows us the MBA salary facts. My objective of put this image was because here we can see the median salary with and without an MBA.
In conclusions, we can see that a college graduate with an MBA degree can expect a median entry level salary of $100,000. Also, we can see that the median salary without an MBA is $60,000. Students who graduate from one of the top ten business schools will see a higher median pay of $140K.
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