Questioninggeller said:
For those who have a graduate degree: How long did it take you to write your thesis/dissertation? What did you write it on? What are you currently doing with that education?
For my undergraduate degree in mathematics, I wrote a paper on the theory and application of logistic regression. It took me about 3 months for the writing.
For my graduate degree in statistics, writing an actual thesis paper was optional; basically only done if you decide to persue a Ph.D. I chose to look at the overall concordance correlation coefficient (useful in biological studies, for example, to see if an electronic digital cuff produces results like a mercury blood pressure cuff). It took me about 2 months to understand the theory, do a simulation, create materials for a presentation, and perpare myself to be grilled by my profs.
Feel free to check out the full thesis on logistic regression and a basic outline of my presentation on the overall concordance correlation coefficient at my
webpage under "Writings".
I'm currently doing payment research for a major cellphone company, liking it, but desperately trying to persuade several major statistical and economic organizations to hire me. I've already applied, received "you're qualified" letters and scores. Now it is just a waiting game. Soon hopefully.

In any case, understanding quantitative topics helps in my current job because I work with numerical problems all day (although of a much simpler variety than what I learned to solve in school).