Please Scroll Down to See Forums Below
napsgear
genezapharmateuticals
domestic-supply
puritysourcelabs
UGL OZ
UGFREAK
napsgeargenezapharmateuticals domestic-supplypuritysourcelabsUGL OZUGFREAK

Which one of these careers would be best for a high school grad

X ray tech will be easiest to find a job. Even my home town of 1200 people has an X ray tech. Ultra sound techs.......gahhhhhh it's a rare find when you come across a good one. It's just a difficult instrument. Echo tech I would imagine would make more, but I think it limits you more than Xray tech in demand. Do x ray to start out with and if he/she gets bored, you can always go echo.....or something with a little more responsibility than a tech. But yeah....I'd start at xray tech.
 
EDDT (Engineering Drafting and Desing Technology) is a two-year degree and starts out at around 40-45K for most companies. 3 years of experience plus a degree can get you 60K a year right out of school if you can find an internship program.

Some companies pay as high as 90k/year for these skills.

I have the EDDT degree and am still working towards a Bachleors in Mechanical Engineering. I do pretty well. My salary isn't fantastic, but I have money stored away from my previous life.
 
I came up short. Only slept maybe 2-3 hours last night.
Not at all, fuck yeah, I had to work on something of a promise that I"m behind on for someone here and shit was just not coming, like blocked cause I was fucking around here so much. So had to log off and then settle down, finally got it together. Lack of sleep too.
Even when your shit is off its still on point.
Sides if anyone here can cut into PM for the fucking visual syphillis he infected us with, its U.

That reverse 'Shallow Hal' shit he sent, lowered my T levels I think.
 
I'm basically the smartest person in the world since I said x-ray first.

I think I'll celebrate by going tinkle.

BRB...
 
For a two year degree.. The only other choices on the list are radiography and radiation tech, which if you get a radiography associates degree, they offer a course to come back full time for 9 months and get an associates in radiation technology, so why not just get that in the first damn place as it is only two years as well.

something in the medical field which should be always be in demand.
 
so why not just get that in the first damn place as it is only two years as well.


Why not just go for four years and get a real degree which will open more doors than specificJobTitleX in fieldY?

As degrees become more common, they will become devalued. All these "colleges" popping up all over the place are really brining down what value associates degrees may have had. (Not to mention that one pays more for the networking than the actual "school" skills learned.)



:cow:
 
Top Bottom