(Press-News.org) EAST LANSING, Mich. --- The job market for new college graduates may be heating up fast, but starting salaries will see only modest growth, a Michigan State University economist says in a new study.
About six in 10 employers say they will keep starting pay the same as last year for newly minted degree-holders. The remainder will offer salary increases, on average, of a modest 3 percent to 5 percent, said Phil Gardner, author of Recruiting Trends, the nation's largest survey of employers' hiring intentions for college graduates.
"Pressure on employers to increase starting salaries has been minimal since the market crash in 2008," said Gardner.
More employers, however, are increasing their incentives to attract the best candidates as the job market improves, Gardner said. Overall hiring for college graduates is expected to jump 16 percent – the largest increase in years.
Engineers at all degree levels continue to receive the highest starting salaries. For example, a new electrical engineer with a bachelor's degree will make, on average, about $57,000 per year. On the lower end of the starting salary scale, those with new bachelor's degrees in social work, advertising and psychology can expect to start at about $37,000.
Gardner also surveyed employers on their intentions to offer internships and co-ops. The internship scene, he found, is improving.
"Nearly 40 percent of employers will enlarge their intern and co-op pool compared to last year, while only 4 percent will decrease the number of interns," Gardner said.
More than 53,000 intern and co-op positions will be available, an average of 25 positions per company.
Some 71 percent of employers said they will pay their interns, up from 67 percent last year.
The findings precede the full Recruiting Trends report, which will be released in November. More than 5,700 companies responded to the survey.
INFORMATION: END
Starting salaries largely stagnant; internship scene improves
2014-10-27
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Adverse drug reactions in children following use of asthma medications
2014-10-27
Since 2007, the European Medicines Agency (EMA), an EU agency, has gathered information on patients' experiences with adverse drug reactions (ADRs) in the European ADR database, EudraVigilance. Both authorities and pharmaceutical companies have a duty to report information about ADRs to the database, which provides new knowledge about unknown and serious ADRs:
"We have studied all EU adverse drug reaction reports on asthma medications approved for – and used by – children over a five-year period (2007 to 2011). In the light of the total use of asthma medications, ...
Study: Menopausal symptoms may be lessened with young children in the house
2014-10-27
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- A new study by researchers at The Kinsey Institute and the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center has found that the timeless, multicultural tradition of grandmothering might have an unexpected benefit: helping some women temper their hot flashes and night sweats during menopause.
The researchers, two clinicians and a bioanthropologist, examined how close relationships can help women in midlife with this inevitable change -- with the clinicians looking for therapeutic benefits that might help patients deal with this unpredictable, poorly understood ...
Breakthrough in molecular electronics paves the way for DNA-based computer circuits in the future
2014-10-27
In a paper published today in Nature Nanotechnology, an international group of scientists announced the most significant breakthrough in a decade toward developing DNA-based electrical circuits.
The central technological revolution of the 20th century was the development of computers, leading to the communication and Internet era. The main measure of this evolution is miniaturization: making our machines smaller. A computer with the memory of the average laptop today was the size of a tennis court in the 1970s. Yet while scientists made great strides in reducing of the ...
Cell membranes self-assemble
2014-10-27
A self-driven reaction can assemble phospholipid membranes like those that enclose cells, a team of chemists at the University of California, San Diego, reports in Angewandte Chemie.
All living cells use membranes to define physical boundaries and control the movement of biomolecules, and movement of molecules through membranes is a primary means of sending signals to and from cells.
Neal Devaraj, a chemistry and biochemistry professor at UC San Diego, leads a research team that develops and explores new reactions that can trigger the formation of membranes, particularly ...
First time-lapse images of exploding fireball from a 'nova' star
2014-10-27
Astronomers at the University of Sydney are part of a team that has taken images of the thermonuclear fireball from a 'nova star' for the first time tracking the explosion as it expands.
The research is published in the journal Nature today.
The eruption occurred last year in the constellation of Delphinus (the Dolphin).
Professor Peter Tuthill, from the University's Sydney Institute for Astronomy and co-author on the paper says astronomers are excited about the achievement:
"Although novae often play second fiddle in the popular imagination to their more famous ...
Tremendously bright pulsar may be 1 of many
2014-10-27
Recently, a team of astronomers reported discovering a pulsating star that appears to shine with the energy of 10 million suns. The find, which was announced in Nature, is the brightest pulsar – a type of rotating neutron star that emits a bright beam of energy that regularly sweeps past Earth like a lighthouse beam – ever seen. But what are the odds finding another one?
According to one of the paper's authors, chances are good now that they know what to look for.
Professor Deepto Chakrabarty of the Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research at ...
Emergent behavior lets bubbles 'sense' environment
2014-10-27
VIDEO:
A collection of artificial lipid bubbles cycle through changes in their membranes as the surrounding environment changes. As the osmotic potential changes, different lipids in the membranes form patchy domains...
Click here for more information.
Tiny, soapy bubbles can reorganize their membranes to let material flow in and out in response to the surrounding environment, according to new work carried out in an international collaboration by biomedical engineers at the ...
One drop will do: UBC researchers develop simple new test for vitamin B12 deficiency
2014-10-27
Researchers at the University of British Columbia have developed a novel method to test for vitamin B12 deficiency that is sensitive enough to work on anyone, including newborn babies and large swaths of the general population.
Vitamin B12 deficiency can be tested with a single drop of blood collected from a finger prick, then blotted and dried overnight on a card consisting of filter paper. The UBC study made dried blood spot card analysis sensitive enough to measure the amount of methylmalonic acid (MMA), an indicator of a person's B12 level.
"This minimally invasive ...
International research group publishes updated criteria for diagnosing multiple myeloma
2014-10-27
ROCHESTER, Minn. –The International Myeloma Working Group (IMWG) today announced that it has updated the criteria for diagnosing multiple myeloma. A paper outlining the new criteria was published in the journal Lancet Oncology. Multiple myeloma is a blood cancer that forms in a type of white blood cell called a plasma cell.
"Our group, which includes more than 180 myeloma researchers worldwide, has updated the definition of multiple myeloma for diagnostic purposes to include validated biomarkers in addition to the current clinical symptoms used for diagnosis which ...
Diabetes patients report better outcomes with improved physician accessibility
2014-10-27
LOS ANGELES — A new model of delivering primary care studied by Keck Medicine of the University of Southern California (USC) researchers has the potential to improve the health of patients with type 2 diabetes.
The model encourages doctors to be more of a "medical home" for their patients by being accessible to patients in person and by phone, developing good ongoing relationships with their patients, and being more proactive in helping coordinate care for patients with difficult health problems.
Gregory Stevens, Ph.D., associate professor of family medicine ...