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8 answers

Anything. depends on what your degree specializes in.

Medical fields are where its at.
Biotech/pharmaceutical companys are hot ( in northeast and cali)

If you are more animal/ecology... teacher at HS level.
Field researcher
SO MANY MAN take your pic.



The biotech/pharmacuetical companies are where you can make the MOST money... then public hospitals, then schools, then field research.
Good luck

2006-07-28 05:50:07 · answer #1 · answered by Peter Griffin 6 · 0 0

I think the most common job is being a lab tech. You don't get that much money, but you get way more than a graduate student and you get lab experience. If you don't want to work in a lab I would definately apply to pharmaceutical companies. They have lots of entry level jobs working with clinical trials and stuff. If you want to be a teacher or nurse or ever make money in science you really have to go back to school.

2006-07-28 07:18:30 · answer #2 · answered by Gina C 1 · 0 0

Greetings;

It's really best to think of a BSc as a starting point. If you don't want to continue your education, there are really two routes:

1. Lab Tech
2. Sales Rep

If you want to continue your education, it all comes down to where your interests lie. If you are interested in reseach (which is where my interest is), be ready for the long haul as you will need a PhD. An MSc really won't cut it, and you'll end up as a glorified lab tech most of the time.

Outside of research there's medicine, education, government, just follow your interests.

2006-07-28 15:40:41 · answer #3 · answered by GREG P 2 · 0 0

I have a BS in biology and have been a lab tech in a Cytology lab, ran an environmental lab, was an environmental consultant, did research focusing on groundwater pollutants, taught medical students how to do research, managed educational programs for physicians, wrote grants, and am now operating my own pottery and mosaic art studio. Want to know how I did it all - I had a great liberal arts based education. You can do whatever you want as long as you can learn how to do it.

2006-07-28 07:53:07 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

What do you want to do?

Nurse
Lab Tech
Pharmaceutical Sales (hard to get into, but lucrative)
Community Health
Toxicology
Biostatistics
Agronomist
Biologist

Biology is such a broad field, that you have to narrow it down to what you're interested in.

Are you still in school? Talk to your advisor. My advice for everyone ( I was an advisor while I was in college) is to think about what YOU want to do, not what your degree is. Unless you're going into a certain field (accounting, engineering), employers don't look at your degree, they look at your skills. What are your marketable skillls? What are your interests?

2006-07-28 05:49:23 · answer #5 · answered by pooh8402 3 · 0 0

nicely that relies upon on what form of Biology you bypass into. Geneticists learn heredity Pathologists focus on the effects of ailments on cells Nutritionists locate out how nutrition is used Pharmacologists learn the effects of drugs and sunstances on residing organisms Marine biologists learn organisms that stay in the sea Physiologists focus on the learn of the existence purposes of vegetation and animals there are various others...very multiple. there is a variety of of information on the cyber web.

2016-10-08 10:28:15 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

if you want to make money, don't be a biologist. everyone does it for love.
if you want to make money, be a patent lawyer or a consultant to a pharmaceutical company or something.
otherwise, do what you love. anything that has to do with biology, you can do with a bs in bio.

2006-07-29 21:30:32 · answer #7 · answered by skybluezoo 2 · 0 0

you can go alternate route and become a teacher. that's what i did.

2006-07-28 07:07:33 · answer #8 · answered by mommydc 1 · 0 0

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