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回覆 Choisumwong 的帖子
You will never know what it will be like when your daughter is of age to go to college. Let go and let her choose her life. Very few people are truly in pure sciences. Research funding, research jobs are based on many things. Some of my friends who has degrees in electronical engineering works for large companies such as Motorola for R&D and even within that particular field, there are many specialties, like walkie-talkie, infra-red transmission, noise reduction transmission etc. Some of my friends that has PhD in Chemical Engineering work for oil companies in Texas. Some others who have PhD in Biomedical engineering, do R&D in such companies and some are lecturers at schools. I also have a friend who has a PhD in Philosophy now teaches Business Ethics in Hong Kong. Commercial R&D is of course funded by the company they work with. There are many funding for university research. Nobody has ever said that money comes easy, there are proposals, grant funding application. It is not just money donated. It has not worked that way for a long time.
I feel that I should let my chidlren explore their interest and Hong Kong is not the way it is. My parents were really mad at me when I chose my A-Level subjects. I wanted to do English, Chemistry and Psychology. They felt that this combination would get me nowhere. I ended up choosing Chemistry, Math and Physics, with advanced Math and AS psychology. I hated this combination. So I was so glad that I went to the US. The credit system allowed me to explore other subjects of interest. This is something that you will not get in British and Hong Kong tertiary education system: where the major you pick is the major you would have to stick with. I did change major twice during undergraduate but still managed to complete the degree in 3 years.
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