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4 answers

Wal-Mart beckons.

2006-11-20 17:25:35 · answer #1 · answered by Frank R 7 · 2 0

Well, ask yourself what anthropology taught you?

I would say...

history, attention to detail, care, patience, deductive reasoning, social history, geography, scientific names, religion, architecture, hunting and gathering, farming, nomadic life, biology, deciphering, forensics, and the ability to answer life's persistent questions, "Why are we here, for how long, where will we go?"

What you learn in college and your major are skills that that may carry you through careers that may not have anything to do with the major. These practical skills lends itself to other careers that require the same training. Anthropology may not give you a job with NASA, but the bits and pieces of knowledge you soaked up sitting in lecture hall has value and the piece of paper that contains the letters BA or BS on it has value. In a first and second world country, education is valued and even if you took underwater basket weaving, by going through college and sticking to one topic is an accomplishment. How you use what you've learned to get a job is up to you. With your special training, you can't get a managerial job anywhere, but you can always get a job somewhere.

An ideal job may be teaching the subject, work at a dig, travel with one of the five branches of the service (navy, army, air force, marines, and the intelligence services) write a book, write a grant to continue your education to get an MA or a PhD, or use your minor to get a job first and hope that you find something that surfaces in the meantime.

I know it's a hard life and the rest of the people don't make it easier. Hang in there, you will get a job. It's just a matter of time and if you are willing to work at a place that pays less than your expectations.

2006-11-20 17:44:08 · answer #2 · answered by mustbetoughtobeme 3 · 0 0

Mmm, all kinds of things. Teaching, writing. Look into newspapers, if that's your thing.

But I do highly recommend attending graduate school.

Wal-Mart certainly does not beckon. I'll rest assured your anthropology degree has at least taught you, as a conscientious consumer, citizen, and human being, to never shop at that store again.

2006-11-20 17:42:10 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i be attentive to many people who've a Linguistics degree who won't be in a position to truly talk any language different than English. My close by language is Spanish, my 2nd language is English, my 0.33 one is French, Hebrew is my forth one, and jap is my 5th one. i'm qualified in all of them (TOEFL, DALF, JLPT.) I definitely have a coaching degree, yet i've got not got a Linguistics degree. i don't experience i could desire to bypass lower back to varsity, and pursue a 2nd degree. i be attentive to diverse those with Linguistics tiers, and that i will confirm that a polyglot has a greater valuable be attentive to-how of ways languages artwork than a individual who majored in Linguistics who somewhat talk a language different than his own close by tongue.

2016-10-22 11:27:04 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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