I am a recipient who is in post-graduation employment right now. Based on my experience and those of others I've read on this forum, it is indeed possible that you will receive a low salary offer for post-graduation employment. Before joining the SMART Program, I was working for a DOE lab as an intern with a M.S. degree, and took a pay cut after receiving my Ph.D. and beginning work with the DoD for post-graduation employment as part of the SMART Program commitment.
Although the SMART Program during the application process stated that there would be the opportunity for salary negotiation, it was my experience that there is virtually no room for negotiation. Since by contract you are obligated to work for the lab to which you are assigned, you can't leave. This gives you no leverage in negotiation. Your negotiation might consist of, "I'm not happy with that salary number." To which the employer might respond, if he is feeling charitable, "OK."
I disagree with some of the comments in the previous post to some extent.
I will have a job and be getting job experience for 3 years after I graduate...
Based on my experience and the experiences of others on this forum, the job experience is awful. I have a Ph.D. and the work I am doing is not even closely related to my research area. When I eventually look for a job outside of the DoD, I will then have to explain to prospective employers why I have a period of 3 years during which I was working on tasks unrelated to my field.
This program gives you a lot of things that are incredibly valuable besides the paying for school and giving you lots of money.
I do admit that during school, the stipend is good relative to a graduate student stipend (which is very low). But this can be negated from the low salary that is paid following graduation.
Including tuition in the income is fine for students who plan to enroll in the program for only undergrad. But for graduate students in math and sciences, this is misleading. At both of the graduate schools I attended (for M.S. and Ph.D.), it was pretty much a given that most students had tuition covered by their advisors. So, it is probably realistic to exclude tuition from your income estimate if you are planning to go to graduate school in math or science. The $90k number is I think a misleading number to throw around, unless maybe you are an undergraduate who is attending a private or out-of-state school and you are sure that you have no other way to pay for school.
And even if you have to take out loans, you may still come out ahead by doing so (especially if you are attending an in-state school), because the salary after graduation is - at least is my case, and those of others on this forum - not competitive at all.
I am a recipient who is in post-graduation employment right now. Based on my experience and those of others I've read on this forum, it is indeed possible that you will receive a low salary offer for post-graduation employment. Before joining the SMART Program, I was working for a DOE lab as an intern with a M.S. degree, and took a pay cut after receiving my Ph.D. and beginning work with the DoD for post-graduation employment as part of the SMART Program commitment.
Although the SMART Program during the application process stated that there would be the opportunity for salary negotiation, it was my experience that there is virtually no room for negotiation. Since by contract you are obligated to work for the lab to which you are assigned, you can't leave. This gives you no leverage in negotiation. Your negotiation might consist of, "I'm not happy with that salary number." To which the employer might respond, if he is feeling charitable, "OK."
I disagree with some of the comments in the previous post to some extent.
[quote]I will have a job and be getting job experience for 3 years after I graduate...[/quote]
Based on my experience and the experiences of others on this forum, the job experience is awful. I have a Ph.D. and the work I am doing is not even closely related to my research area. When I eventually look for a job outside of the DoD, I will then have to explain to prospective employers why I have a period of 3 years during which I was working on tasks unrelated to my field.
[quote]This program gives you a lot of things that are incredibly valuable besides the paying for school and giving you lots of money.[/quote]
I do admit that during school, the stipend is good relative to a graduate student stipend (which is very low). But this can be negated from the low salary that is paid following graduation.
Including tuition in the income is fine for students who plan to enroll in the program for only undergrad. But for graduate students in math and sciences, this is misleading. At both of the graduate schools I attended (for M.S. and Ph.D.), it was pretty much a given that most students had tuition covered by their advisors. So, it is probably realistic to exclude tuition from your income estimate if you are planning to go to graduate school in math or science. The $90k number is I think a misleading number to throw around, unless maybe you are an undergraduate who is attending a private or out-of-state school and you are sure that you have no other way to pay for school.
And even if you have to take out loans, you may still come out ahead by doing so (especially if you are attending an in-state school), because the salary after graduation is - at least is my case, and those of others on this forum - not competitive at all.