I am returning to school after about 10 years since graduating. I finished my BS in Health Fitness and Kinesiology with a 3.96 GPA. I have not taken the GRE yet.
I am deciding between DPT and AA.
I think I would really like either one, and I am making plans to shadow individuals in both careers to see what the job is like on a day-to-day basis.
One of the things that is most important to me is being able to find a good job after graduation and being in a career that has flexible hours. I am married with 2 little girls and want to still have time with my family.
It seems that AA's earn more, but that PT may be more flexible. I also have read TONS of debate between AAs, CRNAs and anesthesiologists and it seems to be a messy situation. Is this going to just make things worse for AAs, or do you think that it will eventually improve, that more states will accept AAs, and that it will be a good career choice.
I am deciding between DPT and AA.
I think I would really like either one, and I am making plans to shadow individuals in both careers to see what the job is like on a day-to-day basis.
One of the things that is most important to me is being able to find a good job after graduation and being in a career that has flexible hours. I am married with 2 little girls and want to still have time with my family.
It seems that AA's earn more, but that PT may be more flexible. I also have read TONS of debate between AAs, CRNAs and anesthesiologists and it seems to be a messy situation. Is this going to just make things worse for AAs, or do you think that it will eventually improve, that more states will accept AAs, and that it will be a good career choice.