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What are career options for history majors, liberal arts degree , and how the transferrable skills are applied to each of the possible career paths , in addition to history teachers and researchers ?
Since when is history a career path? I'll give you a short history of the life of a liberal arts major: unemployment, crappy temp work, more unemployment, back living with mom and dad.
Please reread the OP. You misunderstood the post completely. History is a field of study. The OP is asking about career options for this field of study. They aren't suggesting that history is a career path.
There are a lot of jobs around DC in non profits, govt contracting and the gov itself. Good for academic all-rounders who can communicate, research and write at the highest levels.
You may also want to consider getting project management certification to go along with it.
What are career options for history majors, liberal arts degree , and how the transferrable skills are applied to each of the possible career paths , in addition to history teachers and researchers ?
The fact that you used the phrase "transferable skills" shows that you're not acquainted with the current job market. That's okay; you'll soon learn the truth.
I remember back when I was a naive college student and figured that the "skills" I was learning were "transferable." The reality is that there's no such thing as transferable skills these days. Companies want you to have a specific skill set, demonstrable from professional experience. They don't want to have to spend 1 minute training you. Doesn't matter if your Liberal Arts major thought you how to "think outside the box" and be able to pick up new skills quickly. That's the Great Lie of college education -- that you're learning a thinking skill that is highly valued by companies
Unless you are aiming for academia, the key is not to work "in" your field of study, but to find positions where you can use the skills developed in your field of study. The skill that someone educated in the liberal arts brings is, one hopes, critical thinking. That is, the ability to acquire information from Situation A and apply it to Situation B, then take the lessons from both and develop a solution for Situation C.
Coming out of college, you haven't yet had the chance to apply critical thinking to real-world situations. So, you need to find a job that gives you a foot into that door. It will likely be low-paying and low-status. But you may be able to show your stuff and move up, or take what you've learned and find another employer to apply it. Zentropa has it right: non-profits and think tanks in DC look for someone who can research, analyze and write. You may have to answer the phones at first, but those are the settings where you most likely can thrive.
Since when is history a career path? I'll give you a short history of the life of a liberal arts major: unemployment, crappy temp work, more unemployment, back living with mom and dad.
Pretty much. I have friend from high school who has a political science degree and volunteers for political campaigns. That's all he does and has done since graduation, and we both graduated from college seven years ago.
He still lives with mommy and daddy and refuses to get a job outside of the field at the age of 30. Still waiting for the big campaign manager job to fall in his lap.
Pretty much. I have friend from high school who has a political science degree and volunteers for political campaigns. That's all he does and has done since graduation, and we both graduated from college seven years ago.
He still lives with mommy and daddy and refuses to get a job outside of the field at the age of 30. Still waiting for the big campaign manager job to fall in his lap.
If that is true, then that is a case of someone not wanting to get a real job, period. The OP *wants* to get a real job, and does not care what the field is. Any ideas for him?
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