Lao Tzu
New member
i need career advice. I know this is a chat board, but it is laced with 'smart' people who have probably faced the same problems i am facing now.
I want to be involved in science somehow. I would like to see myself with a (hopefully) Ph.D. in chemistry, biology, or some other life science and doing research towards a laudable goal in 15 years.
However, in the meantime i just want a career that pays at least $14 an hour, so i am looking into an associates of science in nursing, where the starting wage is $21 an hour.
Academically, school is nothing, but the program doesn't begin until fall of 2003, which means i have 1 year to kill. Because i love college i can probably fit 45 credit hours into 1 year. Basically, in the time i need to get an associates in nursing i can get a bachelors in anything.
Because i want to be involved in science, should i just switch from nursing to a bachelors in chemistry, biology, or some other life science? Or should i look into another associates program that pays $15 an hour (lab technician, for example), or should i wait out the nursing application process.
My most important question is this
ARE THERE REALISTIC CAREER OPTIONS FOR PEOPLE WITH A BACHELORS IN CHEMISTRY OR BIOLOGY?
I figure since i want to get a bachelors in some type of science, i might as well do it now, but i don't know what i can do with it (BESIDES TEACHING ANYONE, FUCK TEACHING
).
I want to be involved in science somehow. I would like to see myself with a (hopefully) Ph.D. in chemistry, biology, or some other life science and doing research towards a laudable goal in 15 years.
However, in the meantime i just want a career that pays at least $14 an hour, so i am looking into an associates of science in nursing, where the starting wage is $21 an hour.
Academically, school is nothing, but the program doesn't begin until fall of 2003, which means i have 1 year to kill. Because i love college i can probably fit 45 credit hours into 1 year. Basically, in the time i need to get an associates in nursing i can get a bachelors in anything.
Because i want to be involved in science, should i just switch from nursing to a bachelors in chemistry, biology, or some other life science? Or should i look into another associates program that pays $15 an hour (lab technician, for example), or should i wait out the nursing application process.
My most important question is this
ARE THERE REALISTIC CAREER OPTIONS FOR PEOPLE WITH A BACHELORS IN CHEMISTRY OR BIOLOGY?
I figure since i want to get a bachelors in some type of science, i might as well do it now, but i don't know what i can do with it (BESIDES TEACHING ANYONE, FUCK TEACHING
