by guestivusMaximus » Fri Jul 26, 2013 8:36 am
I'm a 2010 cohort. To my knowledge, all of the SMART students at my facility are brought in at the same rate, regardless of degree level. SMART is really seen as a "free labor" program, where the facility maximizes return for very little investment. When it comes to salary, everything I have ever been officially and unofficially counseled on has never materialized. SMART students don't really have any bargaining power, and even once hired, are still 'conditional' hires and on 'probation'. We were all told that we would receive a raise at 6 months, and that never happened. We were all told that we would receive a raise at a year and that didn't happen either.
Here's the break down of what SMART looks like at my facility:
2 guys are really happy (Ph.D & BS)
2 have left the program early or at the end of their contract
1 was terminated
1 person was told to start after graduation and wasn't compensated for their past time, and didn't officially get on payroll until 3 months after they started initially working for free (time worked did not count towards SMART payback)
1 in limbo that works sometimes, but not often (very dissatisfied w/ SMART)
1 that never showed up, but supposedly filed an extension to finish Ph.D (18 months ago)
This seems to be a great program for individuals with no experience, and a single degree. Everyone else that is in, has completed graduate school,l or has military experience will find it wanting. PM's and Branch Chief's really could give a 'rat crap' about how many publications you have, or the impact factor of your last peer reviewed paper, or your patent. SMART is considered low-cost labor, and that is it. Not everyone's situation is the same; however most of my colleagues are in similar positions. Most SMART students leave as soon as their commitment is up, or return to school. My advice to folks thinking about committing to SMART is to ask "what will my job be?" followed by "what is the description of my position?" If you get a straight answer, it might turn out okay. If you get a "ho-hum", "we don't know yet", or "we can't tell you until we look at your transcripts", you should probably pass on SMART.
In terms of salary: A co-worker of mine with 6 years of military service and 4 years at the facility is paid $83k a year. That's a pretty good salary bench mark for 10 years of federal service. Most folks come in around $50k-$65k depending on locality (GS-11), with very slow and minor pay increase increments.
I'm a 2010 cohort. To my knowledge, all of the SMART students at my facility are brought in at the same rate, regardless of degree level. SMART is really seen as a "free labor" program, where the facility maximizes return for very little investment. When it comes to salary, everything I have ever been officially and unofficially counseled on has never materialized. SMART students don't really have any bargaining power, and even once hired, are still 'conditional' hires and on 'probation'. We were all told that we would receive a raise at 6 months, and that never happened. We were all told that we would receive a raise at a year and that didn't happen either.
Here's the break down of what SMART looks like at my facility:
2 guys are really happy (Ph.D & BS)
2 have left the program early or at the end of their contract
1 was terminated
1 person was told to start after graduation and wasn't compensated for their past time, and didn't officially get on payroll until 3 months after they started initially working for free (time worked did not count towards SMART payback)
1 in limbo that works sometimes, but not often (very dissatisfied w/ SMART)
1 that never showed up, but supposedly filed an extension to finish Ph.D (18 months ago)
This seems to be a great program for individuals with no experience, and a single degree. Everyone else that is in, has completed graduate school,l or has military experience will find it wanting. PM's and Branch Chief's really could give a 'rat crap' about how many publications you have, or the impact factor of your last peer reviewed paper, or your patent. SMART is considered low-cost labor, and that is it. Not everyone's situation is the same; however most of my colleagues are in similar positions. Most SMART students leave as soon as their commitment is up, or return to school. My advice to folks thinking about committing to SMART is to ask "what will my job be?" followed by "what is the description of my position?" If you get a straight answer, it might turn out okay. If you get a "ho-hum", "we don't know yet", or "we can't tell you until we look at your transcripts", you should probably pass on SMART.
In terms of salary: A co-worker of mine with 6 years of military service and 4 years at the facility is paid $83k a year. That's a pretty good salary bench mark for 10 years of federal service. Most folks come in around $50k-$65k depending on locality (GS-11), with very slow and minor pay increase increments.