View Single Post
  #7  
Old 01-23-2009, 10:03 AM
KSigkid KSigkid is offline
GreekChat Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: New England
Posts: 9,328
Whether you should work, or even can work, will depend heavily on your program.

I'm working full-time while attending law school evenings (usually 4 evenings per week). However, if I was a day student, the ABA would limit the amount I could work to 20 hours per week (it depends on how many credits you take). My money from work is going towards school, and since I go to a (relatively) inexpensive state school, that plus financial aid covers my tuition and living expenses. Of course, my wife works full-time as well, so that helps.

Depending on the program, some schools will give you a stipend for working with a professor or on a project.

I'll echo Kevin on the student loans; just make sure you keep track of your loans, and, before you take any out, try to take a long view of your career. You'll want to think about the following things (which I've tried to keep in mind throughout my schooling):

- Will you be making enough when you graduate to pay the loans off?
- How will loan payments fit into your long-term future? (buying a house, buying a car, having a family, etc.)
- Is your job market one that has been hit especially hard by the economic downturn?
- What will your monthly payments be when you graduate?
- Is there any way to get loan reimbursement because of your profession?

Again, like Kevin said, way too many people think of loans as Monopoly money, and get into real trouble when they graduate and can't pay them off.
Reply With Quote