Well, yes and no. If the Masters is in a different field or concentration, it can be of value. It all depends on what you do, what you're good at, what they recognize of your potential, and what the degree is in.
On 6/13/07, Sue Heim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Employers do not have zero motivation for continuing education. They most > likely DO have zero motivation for graduate degrees. If you, as a tech > writer, don't have any degrees, then using tuition reimbursement to get an > Associates and then Bach degree is likely in the company's best interest. > Not so much for a Masters. -- Bill Swallow HATT List Owner WWP-Users List Owner Senior Member STC, TechValley Chapter STC Single-Sourcing SIG Manager http://techcommdood.blogspot.com avid homebrewer and proud beer snob "I see your OOO message and raise you a clue." ______________________________________________ Author Help files and create printed documentation with Doc-To-Help. New release adds Team Authoring Support, enhanced Web-based help technology and PDF output. Learn more at www.doctohelp.com/tcp. Interactive 3D Documentation Parts catalogs, animated instructions, and more. www.i3deverywhere.com _______________________________________________ Technical Communication Professionals Post a message to the list: email [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subscribe, unsubscribe, archives, account options, list info: http://techcommpros.com/mailman/listinfo/tcp_techcommpros.com Subscribe (email): send a blank message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe (email): send a blank message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Need help? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] Get the TCP whole experience! http://www.techcommpros.com
