Susanne * stole my fire on this one. Being an actuary is almost all math, and the work is challenging and useful. Actuaries study and analyze data to come up with rates for insurance companies (health, life, auto, etc.), pension plans, business strategies, and so on.
A starting actuary (with an exam or two under his or her belt) can make $30-40k per year. A friend of mine got a job straight out of college after passing his first three exams and started at $45k. Pass all ten SoA (Society of Actuary) exams and you could make $100-200k, annually.
2006-06-29 08:14:40
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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It extremely relies upon on your interpretation of coming up reliable money. training is a reliable field, extremely in a rewarding field together with arithmetic - as that's in severe call for and shows no signs and indications of slowing down. With a level in math, you could in all threat get right into a greater proper paying college district then somebody with yet another degree. i'm a third year math instructor making over $42K no longer counting supplementals (i'm no longer bragging). and that i'm no longer even in a rich district. the college I artwork at replaced into the 1st, and as a bring about basic terms, place I had an interview. in case you nonetheless are not thinking two times approximately training, actuarial technology, laptop technology and archives are math jobs in call for.
2016-10-31 22:35:05
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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Any Engineering Field. If you want to stay more so math, Structural & Civil Engineering.
2006-06-29 08:11:05
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answer #3
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answered by honker 4
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well the engineer profession is growing really fast and that has almost endless posibilities!
teaching is also great. Many sciences including PHYSICS require a lot of math and science is always fun!
2006-06-29 08:08:52
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answer #4
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answered by Amber 1
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Have you thought about becoming an actuary? They make really good money, but you would have to take specialized exams in order to become certified.
2006-06-29 08:06:48
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answer #5
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answered by Susanne A 2
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Actuary: http://users.aol.com/fcas/advice.html
2006-06-29 14:30:48
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answer #6
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answered by fcas80 7
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Statistical analyst or actuary. CPA, auditor, lottery manipulator--I mean regulator, professional gambler.
2006-06-29 08:06:10
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answer #7
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answered by bequalming 5
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Go for the big one - just become a mathematician.
2006-06-29 08:06:57
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answer #8
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answered by rayndeon 2
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Check out this reference site! http://www.ams.org/careers/
2006-06-29 08:08:32
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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engineer, doctor, government
2006-06-29 08:06:14
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answer #10
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answered by first_gholam 4
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