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http://catalog.seuniversity.edu/preview_program.php?catoid=8&poid=733

and where would you apply for it. thanks!!!!

2007-10-22 05:08:39 · 3 answers · asked by :) 3 in Business & Finance Careers & Employment Other - Careers & Employment

and also how much would it pay?

2007-10-22 05:09:05 · update #1

3 answers

More than likely...a production assistant to start out. I know, sounds glamourous, LOL. But keep plugging away for something that you want. Keep looking for things close to you unless you are willing to move...Then you may need to head to Hollywood and just work until you get a break of some kind.

Good luck and don't give up if it is what you really, really want to do.

2007-10-22 05:38:34 · answer #1 · answered by Jennifer S 3 · 1 0

This isn't a "crack into the film business" sort of degree - this is a social sciences degree and professionals in the social sciences need a doctorate.

You apply at the master's degree granting college of your choice for a master's program and then later at a PhD program of your choice for the PhD. Once you have those, you may then proceed to "study film" for a living.

Alternatively, it is still a Bachelor of Arts and many jobs require only that you have a bachelor's degree without regard to the major at all.

There are no non-entry level jobs that require no experience; that's why they aren't entry level. So, what you're looking for are entry level jobs so that you can get some experience.

First you determine what industry you'd like to work in. Like real estate, banking, insurance, manufacturing, health, retail, sales,... pick an industry you want to work in.

Then you determine what the entry level, degree holder, jobs in that industry are. Wanna do banking? Look at jobs like Loan Officer or branch manager trainee. Competition will be tight from the business types but you have the advantage that film studies required a lot of writing. Pick the job and see if you meet the minimum qualifications for that job. (for example, while college professor might sound fun - it requires a PhD in most cases)

Then you find places that hire that job - in this case, banks. Apply for jobs at banks.

Forget two ideas that college grads seem to have stuck in their head. 1) degree title does not equal job title - never has, never will. Relatively few careers require a specific bachelor's degree. 2) having a degree does not mean you start any higher on the ladder - it just means that you'll climb the ladder faster than those who don't and they will have a shorter ladder to climb because they will top out at "head teller" while you go on to "branch manager".

2007-10-22 05:36:54 · answer #2 · answered by CoachT 7 · 0 0

Receptionist
Coffee Getter

If you want to get this degree to crack into the film business then do a double major as a fall back option. Striking it rich in the movie industry, or even making a realistic living in the movie industry is like being drafted into the NFL. Millions of people want the job, but only a few hundred lucky people get to join.

When you have these grand ideas and dreams, you need to also have back up plans. You may find that somewhere between your dream and the start, you find what really makes you happy because it’s not always what you think.

2007-10-22 05:19:20 · answer #3 · answered by PseudogodJ 3 · 1 0

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