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> Get Articles > Job and Career > Do you need a degree for career freedom?

Do you need a degree for career freedom?


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Cathy Goodwin
cathymovinglady.com

Make your move to career freedom
http://www.movinglady.com


Q. I hate my job as a computer consultant. The aptitude

tests say I should be a recreation specialist.

I like the idea but I dread returning to school for a new

degree.



A. Before you invest in a degree, take a test drive.

Find two or three people who are doing what

you want to do and ask to spend a day or a week with

them.



If you're still interested, visit a few schools or

universities that offer degrees in your area of interest.

Ask for names of people who have graduated one, three and

five years ago.



Ask the alumni, "Did this degree help you get your job?

Advance in your job?

"Would you have done better with a degree from another

school? Or would you have done as well with a degree from

a lower-ranked or less expensive school?"



Ask students and alumni, not faculty. I've been there.

Professors must support their own programs, even when they

want to say, "You can do better elsewhere," or, "This program

is a waste of your time and money."



And these days, anyone with a title like "Admissions

Director" or "Enrollment Management" may be trying to make

a sale, not offer objective guidance. If you believe your

new career requires you to quit your job and begin a full-

time degree program, investigate alternatives.



You may find an equally satisfying career that offers

on-the-job training. No degree program offers a magic

bullet. Ultimately you may win the job and career success by

your power networking as well as you social, interpersonal

and technical skills.



Don't like one option? Try another.

There are many paths to career fulfillment, not just one.

There is no way for a single career coach, consultant or

counselor to know the ins and outs of every career. You

should be guided through an exploratory phase, not steered

in one direction.



Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D. author, speaker, career consoultant

"When career freedom means academics"

http://www.movinglady.com/academics.html

Free ezine: subscribemovinglady.com

cathymovinglady.com 505-534-4294





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