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I am yet not aware about job opportunities. i am interested in either defence or investigation or any job having adventure & courage.

2006-11-15 01:25:36 · 3 answers · asked by sameer j 1 in Business & Finance Careers & Employment

3 answers

Well, one of my specialties is as a forensic document examiner. I work on contract with a lot of people in law enforcement and most of them consider their work to be pretty mundane! It's not the kind of thing you see on T.V. So if you're thinking of a career in some branch of forensic science, be prepared to spend a lot of time standing around, taking notes, and performing a good deal of laboratory work. When I take a contract job my tools are a microscope, a scanner, and a computer.

However, compared to direct market sales or working in an insurance agency this stuff is pretty cool. There are many pathways you can take, from a crime scene specialist all the way up to a medical examiner or a police detective/FBI agent. It all depends on how good you are at science and how much schooling you want to deal with. With a B.A. in criminal justice or biology or some related field you could be a crime scene specialist. A lot of the training is on the job - in fact there is no degree for document analysis.

Crime scene work pays the least and it can get pretty gross, but if you want to be in the big middle of an investigation, there you go. From there on up you have other tiers of work. You could get a degree and become a cop or apply for admission to the FBI. This requires a lot more schooling and excellent grades. You could also get an M.A. or a PhD in a field like physical anthropology and work as a forensic anthropologist. This work is very cool but also very competitive. Forensic psychology is another good field, but these areas that are highly specialized require a lot of schooling. For instance I'm 32 and still working on my PhD.

It depends on your aptitude for science and education. Take a look at how much of that you're willing to handle and go from there!

2006-11-15 01:35:11 · answer #1 · answered by texascrazyhorse 4 · 1 0

Go to school for 4-6 years, earn a bachlors or masters and apply at the FBI.
Forensic Science is not adventure, your usually stuck in a lab anyalizing the scenes of a crime.Plus the schooling is hard

Now Dog The Bounty Hunter (THATS ADVENTURE)

2006-11-15 09:28:44 · answer #2 · answered by Utopia 4 · 0 0

burger king or wendys

2006-11-15 09:28:33 · answer #3 · answered by john s 1 · 0 1

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