Quote:
Originally Posted by blazey
Yes, this is true but they rise at similar rates usually. I'm not bothered anyway. They can't get blood from a stone. The only reason I'm not studying this year is because I can't get the finance together. I need around £8000 still, maybe more. But it is going to be impossible to get in such a short space of time so I'm just going to do something else with my life. That's the best thing about making the most of your time at uni and spending time doing a lot of work outside of your degree, you leave feeling like you ARE employable even if you feel like it is impossible. I have a lot of friends who feel more unemployable than before they started.
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A lot of it depends on the course you do - when I was choosing which field to go into it was between Law and CS, when I was choosing there were 4 graduates for every one place in law school and there were 4 jobs for every one CS graduate. On that basis I went for CS, although the market has changed since then I am still confident I will be able to get a graduate level job come this time next year, given I do some extra work aside from my course to boost my cv.