Question:

I am on my third year of college and I still haven't decided what I want to major in. I feel I am being slowed down by taking classes that aren't getting me anywhere. I was leaning toward the arts but I know that's a very difficult area to succeed in as far as recognition and pay. I recently signed up for adult ROP/hands-on training classes in electronic publishing - just to get started somewhere. Everyone tells me it's never too late to go back to school but I feel that I am already so far behind. Does it look bad to employers if most of your learning was attained from ROP classes?

Answer:

What do you love? Your long-term career focus needs to be on how your job will increase your quality of life. If you spend your working time doing something that you love, then getting a focus is not difficult.

Many people do not think their ideal job is out there. But regardless of what yours might be, do not dismiss it out of hand. Check it out first. Use the Internet to explore the job. Find people that do that job now and talk to them. Perhaps you can arrange an internship. Absorb yourself in the details of what it is and see if it is truly something that you want to for the next 40+ years.

Then address the education issue. If you have thoroughly researched the rest of your life first, the things you need to do to make it happen will become more clear. Employers by and large do not take issue with your major. (Unless you are in a field like medicine or law-- where strict requirements are well known). Employers want to know that you have learned to learn. Learning is a skill.



--Kelly Stone, myjobsearch.com




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