I was an art history major. Yes, I know, not the most practical. After being out of college 10 yrs, I have a decent job or I guess a "real" job. A few unisersities near here offer management/business certificates (4-6 classes) for people with liberal arts degrees and no business background. I did that and it really helped me with business.
2006-08-30 14:41:18
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answer #1
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answered by goofnwfy 4
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Some school districts will now hire you with a degree, you may need to get some specific student teaching under your belt, but nothing like going back for another degree.
Information Technology also often just wants "a degree". Back in the stone ages (when I was going into IT and it was called data processing or DP), lots of NASA engineers and teachers went into IT because they couldn't get jobs. That's held still true for today, lots of network people have gone to network training, but their bachelors are in an unrelated field.
2006-08-30 14:40:25
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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If the job is not in a technical field, such as engineering or science, you will only need a BA to enter the work force as an entry level employee.
Try applying at a bank, you can quickly move up the corporate ladder.
2006-08-30 15:55:09
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I found this cool website the other day that's funded by the federal government (i.e. our taxdollars) and contains a lot of information about what kind of careers are good based on your skills. It's the online version of the Occupational Information Network, and it's called O*Net Online. Best of all, there are no fees.
I would recommend using the skills search to find some suggestions.
Check it out: http://online.onetcenter.org/
2006-08-30 15:52:55
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answer #4
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answered by kh_telco_mom 3
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Given your mechanical engineering degree, you likely have a large historic past in arithmetic, so rather lots any activity that demands arithmetic might gladly take you. final 3 hundred and sixty 5 days, my intro to engineering professor (Ph.D mechanical engineering) instructed me approximately certainly one of his friends who have been given his MS in mechanical engineering and ended up with a activity doing no longer something yet computing gadget programming - ordinary, no longer even doing embedded platforms or computerized controls, no mechanical engineering skills in any respect different than for arithmetic.
2016-09-30 04:46:31
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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Teaching.
2006-08-30 14:43:00
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answer #6
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answered by what the heck? 3
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http://createmyfuture.com
2006-08-30 15:40:25
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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