Diluted Dante wrote:I just took one of those career quiz things. One suggestion was physicist. Another was Insurance policy processing clerk.
Diluted Dante wrote:I just took one of those career quiz things. One suggestion was physicist. Another was Insurance policy processing clerk.
Outlaw wrote:Diluted Dante wrote:I just took one of those career quiz things. One suggestion was physicist. Another was Insurance policy processing clerk.
Was it like those things you did in high school for careers day? Mine told me to be a meteorologist.
EvilRedEye wrote:Alternatively, market yourself as a proper physicist and shout "NO, NO, NO, NO, NO! THAT BIT'S JUST UNIVERSAL CONSTANTS!" when someone asks you a difficult question.
Gonzo wrote:Ha haha haha haha haha These guys make zero doshM0stly harm13ss wrote:Law then human rights lawyer?
Gonzo wrote:Ha haha haha haha hahaM0stly harm13ss wrote:Law then human rights lawyer?
These guys make zero dosh
SpaceGazelle wrote:The maths requires some work admittedly, but it's fairly lightweight if you just do physics. Astronomy maths is more demanding than actually doing a degree in maths, but you gets out what you put in and all that.
We did far, far more QM in astronomy than physics, and I did both.The Daddy wrote:SpaceGazelle wrote:The maths requires some work admittedly, but it's fairly lightweight if you just do physics. Astronomy maths is more demanding than actually doing a degree in maths, but you gets out what you put in and all that.
I still hold that my third year quantum physics module was by far the hardest thing I've ever done. I don't think the maths even was maths. Made the astronomy stuff look easy.
WorKid wrote:Not retail, back-office. Finance, project stuff, whatever.
I think I want to be out of a commercial organisation altogether. Something in a charity sounds more like it.wonderbanana wrote:Management systems for a charity would potentially suit. For something easier to 'find' and train for, how about taking on EHS? Theres a huge demand at the moment (i know this direct from Michael Page) and its kinda half way to a helping people / environment type thing but business oriented obv.
Done that too. As I say, I don't think I've got much more to learn from English teaching itself, the steps above that are management in a business environment which doesn't appeal greatly.Kow wrote:Go somewhere where teaching English is actually a job, that makes money, and has options.
May I ask why?Lord_Griff wrote:Send me your cv.
I know you weren't being entirely serious, but sometimes I wonder if doing so when I was younger mightn't have been a good idea, but I'm not sure that I could do it now.GooberTheHat wrote:Join the Army yoss. ☺
That does appeal (despite the lack of money), but it would be quite a commitment. Hmm.M0stly harm13ss wrote:Law then human rights lawyer?
Has crossed my mind, but I think I'd rather be trying to affect change from the bottom up. I don't have much faith in our political system the way it stands. I think that becoming a pol means either being independent, so pretty powerless, or joining a party and compromising one ideal after another to get somewhere until you lose sight of why you went on in the first place.monkey wrote:Yoss - politics.
I can't claim to have a passion for teaching, and I really don't like teaching kids. Plus, fuck OFSTED. Social work has crossed my mind, but I'm not sure that it's for me. The day to day stuff doesn't appeal.Elmlea wrote:Yoss, go be a social worker, or add whatever qualification you need to teach kids rather than TEFL. Both of those will have you making a genuine, quantifiable difference to peoples' lives on a daily basis.
Medecine in general is very interesting to me, but it does seem quite the commitment.The Daddy wrote:Do physiotherapist. Just reading a thing in paper that says there's a shortage.
It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!