Besides the usual teaching/medical route, you could also consider careers in:
Public Health Genetics
Pharmacogenomics
Epidemiology
Nanotechnology
Health Law
Bioethics
Molecular Anthropology
Forensics
2006-11-30 16:55:46
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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You can do so much with cell/bio genetics. Go to grad school and do research, go to pharmacy school, medical school, dental school, nursing school, pharmaceutical research. You can also go into business and law, who better to be a regional manager at a pharmaceutical company than someone who knows about cell bio and has a MBA. Who might know more about forensics and law than a lawyer who has studied DNA technology? You can teach, you can be a genetic counselor. Lots of possibilities.
2006-11-30 23:44:36
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answer #2
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answered by Brian B 4
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Just about wright your own ticket, now days. How I long for the golden years of evolutionary biology. Haldane, Fisher, Wright, Mayr, Huxley, Dobzansky, Simpson; now those were real biologists and geneticists. Bio-tech is very big now. Work with monoclonal antibodies.
2006-11-30 23:42:05
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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ntohing really...all the poeple that have a major in this work in city gardens and thats it...Usually, to get a job in a basic science field (maths. chemistry, physics, bio) u must at least get a masters
2006-11-30 23:50:32
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answer #4
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answered by iidibitizi 3
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make clones with the rite cells and protein to grow them in
2006-11-30 23:39:12
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answer #5
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answered by botany128 1
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