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Old Aug 16, 2017, 03:54 AM
GoodVibrations101 GoodVibrations101 is offline
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Member Since: Jun 2017
Location: California
Posts: 79
Quote:
Originally Posted by feralkittymom View Post
Well, my experiences have been nothing like OP's. Both were PhDs, both worked long hours, both have accepted payment far below their full fees, and both were in private practice. One also had a full-time University administrative job. But I am not in an urban area, but rather a University town.

I think there are a few flaws in the logic here when comparing professions. OP, if you have a PhD and are working as a high school teacher, you are under employed. You may be paid at the highest discretionary level, but the ceiling is determined by the position, not who holds it. If you held a University post, your income would be far more comparable.

Not sure what altruism or "working hard" has to do with anything. Such qualitative distinctions are just as unrealistic to demand from therapists as from teachers or nurses or anyone else in a helping profession. Many show such qualities as a function of the personality that informed their choice of profession. But to determine comparative worth based on intention seems pointless (and impossible) to me. If any professional doesn't embody a value I require, I find one who does. But I accept that it's my preference I'm serving, not a failing in the professional.

Any professional who is self-employed has business expenses; insurance reimbursements rarely match full fee. And some insurance agreements will not allow for any discretion in fee. In my experience, no professional I have hired has ever cost me more than lawyers. What we really need is insurance coverage for legal fees.
Your view of what a person is supposed to do with a PhD is antiquated. There is no set path that one is supposed to take with a PhD, and there are many PhDs teaching at the high school level.

It is a logical fallacy called ad hominem fallacy to examine the motivation of a question by examing the asker's personal background. There are many academic studies and newspaper articles questioning whether a particular good or service is inflated or excessive. I am focusing on a particular industry and people can make comparisons across the providers in an industry. It ia pretty average type of question.