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8 answers

If you're having some difficulty with this, you can do three things:

#1 - Pray. If you're accustomed to prayer, then please, pray about it. If not, it WORKS!

#2 - Take some time to think about what your passions are. Do you like the indoors or outdoors better? Do you like to be active, or comfortable? Try and narrow down some career fields this way. There are also occupational tests you can take for this purpose.

#3 - Experiment! Most people got into their career field by trying things, then deciding they didn't like it, and then moving on to something else, and eventually they found what they enjoy most. Based on your own personal experiences, you'll eventually find the career or type of work that suits you best!

Good luck!

2006-06-15 15:37:29 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Take the Career Key test. It is one of only a
few professional-quality career tests on the Internet. It has been used by career counselors for over 20 years.

2006-06-15 15:35:44 · answer #2 · answered by Gillian 2 · 0 0

in reality, both ranges and professions are very technical, numbers appropriate. With engineering, you've a a lot wider field of work that's accessible. With finance, you're a money specialist. money is money. I agree that there are more desirable possibilities with engineering after commencement, besides the indisputable fact that, as with some thing that is what you're making of the issue. Engineering provides you youthful workers with broader adventure very ideal for administration positions later in existence. Engineers can incredibly bypass into lateral positions, for this reason gaining mgmt exp for occupation progression down the line. back, it relies upon on the fellow, yet i'd bypass for the eng degree. even with you pick, you could make a good difficulty out of it. sturdy success!

2016-10-30 23:32:34 · answer #3 · answered by derival 4 · 0 0

If you're confused about what you want to do, why don't try a career counselor. I used one and she really helped me. I was skeptical at first too, afraid she might tell me I was going to be a great couch potato or something. But, if you keep an open mind, it can tell you a lot more about yourself and possibly a job that fits those core competencies. Then, after you finish your analysis, try going to this site:

http://www.jobpodge.com

It's a site of people's first hand view of their job experiences. My career counselor recommended it to me and it helped me bypass getting informational interviews. Try it out and good luck!

2006-06-21 19:26:35 · answer #4 · answered by sugarbaby33 2 · 0 0

Why would you ask total strangers a question like that? How would we know your interests or your strengths and weaknesses? Take an aptitude test and take as many different subjects as you can to see what appeals to you. Then work hard to get it.

2006-06-15 15:37:31 · answer #5 · answered by notyou311 7 · 0 0

It depends what you are most interested in doing, and how much money you want to make. For me, money isn't as important as doing something I like, my focus is on sociology and education (oddly I'd want to teach math and not sociology).

You just have to ask yourself what you want to do.

2006-06-15 15:35:54 · answer #6 · answered by Carolina Kitten 6 · 0 0

You might want to try enlisting, it is the only place where you have a chance to try on a carreer before you "buy" into it.

2006-06-15 15:37:07 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

anything involving alcohol... because when times are good, people drink to celebrate them being good... when times are bad, people drink to forget theyre bad.
seriously though, if you like math, CPA, because people always need someone to do the math for them.

2006-06-15 15:36:18 · answer #8 · answered by Slevel 3 · 0 0

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