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View Full Version : I am well-rounded, now what career do I choose?


vARSITYteNNis
Jul 23, 2008, 04:08 PM
All right, here are the facts:

1. I get great grades in every subject in school
2. I love everything from art to math to science to history
3. I am willing to go to school as long as I need to
4. I am hardworking and determined
5. I am great with people
6. I am in great shape
7. I want to do something that will have an impact on someone’s life
8. I want to create change and act as a leader
9. I don’t want to sit in a desk all day, I rather be out doing, rather than sitting

So, my question, what do I do with my life? I could be a professional tennis player, or a criminal physiologist. I could be an architect or an artist. I could be a photographer for National Geographic or a mathematician. Does anyone have a suggestion that fit all of my criteria? Thanks tons! =]

Rockstar714
Jul 23, 2008, 04:12 PM
What about public relations? You'd be out meeting with people, you'd be helping people, you have to be determined and you could create some change.

vingogly
Jul 27, 2008, 02:52 PM
Go to this site (http://www.self-directed-search.com/) and take the Self Directed Search. It will cost 9.95USD. The result will be a report that will give your career preferences score on six dimensions: Realistic, Investigative, Artistic, Social, Entrepreneurial, and Conventional. The top three scores give you your Holland profile. Holland's theory says that you are likely to be happiest in careers that more or less match your profile. It will give you several lists of possible career choices, starting with the best matches. How does it match? The SDS runs on a database of many thousands of test results, and they've matched actual career satisfaction with a person's Holland profile.

So this will give you a list of careers that people with similar Holland scores have been pretty happy with. Now what? You can investigated each career on the O*Net online site. Look at your report (or the sample report on the site): each career listed has a DOT Number associated with it. Go to the O*Net site here (http://online.onetcenter.org/help/online/crosswalk) and enter the DOT Number for the career you're interested in investigating in the field "DOT code or title search". This will give you all kinds of interesting information about the career, including education needed, job prospects, skills needed, median earnings in the USA, etc. You can even get a report tailored for a specific state. (this is all based on U.S. government data, so bear in mind that if you're in a different country the situation may be different there)

Note that this doesn't tell you that you'd be good at something, but it does tell you the sorts of careers you'd likely be happy with given your preferences.