Anonymous wrote:Special need and inclusion: teaching or not, it is a job that will put you in schools or near schools. I can't imagine you would have much cared without classroom experience or the equivalent.
You have described yourself as kinda quiet and not all that much good at anything. Figure out your strengths. Then figure out what kind of job you want. Then choose the degree.
I suspect that the side of public health that doesn't require and use statistics is the part of public health that involves interacting with other humans, you have ruled out math, and you have ruled out too much human interaction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: There are not many jobs in either one of those fields. If you wanted to be a special ed teacher that would be one thing, but what would someone do with a degree in "special needs and inclusion" that doesn't involve teaching?
She can add on the teaching certification. There are TONS of jobs with special needs people. That's a high need area. Public health, I'm not sure. Can someone else answer this question? Are jobs readily available for MPH degrees? I'm honestly not sure.
I used to work in a college of public health. No, there's not a lot of jobs for people with MPHs. The market is saturated, and the curriculum isn't entirely practical or rigorous, so the wages trend towards the lower end (lots of $40k-$60k). There are a lot of program assistant type jobs for research grants, but if OP is looking for stability and salary, that's not a place she should want to find herself in.
Did some people ever graduate from the program and seem to regret their choice of study? I hear about people with PH degrees claiming they make six figures after years in the field.
I constantly met people who regretted their choice of study. It was a really depressing place to work.
Many went back to get additional schooling on top of the MPH.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: There are not many jobs in either one of those fields. If you wanted to be a special ed teacher that would be one thing, but what would someone do with a degree in "special needs and inclusion" that doesn't involve teaching?
She can add on the teaching certification. There are TONS of jobs with special needs people. That's a high need area. Public health, I'm not sure. Can someone else answer this question? Are jobs readily available for MPH degrees? I'm honestly not sure.
I used to work in a college of public health. No, there's not a lot of jobs for people with MPHs. The market is saturated, and the curriculum isn't entirely practical or rigorous, so the wages trend towards the lower end (lots of $40k-$60k). There are a lot of program assistant type jobs for research grants, but if OP is looking for stability and salary, that's not a place she should want to find herself in.
Did some people ever graduate from the program and seem to regret their choice of study? I hear about people with PH degrees claiming they make six figures after years in the field.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: There are not many jobs in either one of those fields. If you wanted to be a special ed teacher that would be one thing, but what would someone do with a degree in "special needs and inclusion" that doesn't involve teaching?
She can add on the teaching certification. There are TONS of jobs with special needs people. That's a high need area. Public health, I'm not sure. Can someone else answer this question? Are jobs readily available for MPH degrees? I'm honestly not sure.
I used to work in a college of public health. No, there's not a lot of jobs for people with MPHs. The market is saturated, and the curriculum isn't entirely practical or rigorous, so the wages trend towards the lower end (lots of $40k-$60k). There are a lot of program assistant type jobs for research grants, but if OP is looking for stability and salary, that's not a place she should want to find herself in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: There are not many jobs in either one of those fields. If you wanted to be a special ed teacher that would be one thing, but what would someone do with a degree in "special needs and inclusion" that doesn't involve teaching?
She can add on the teaching certification. There are TONS of jobs with special needs people. That's a high need area. Public health, I'm not sure. Can someone else answer this question? Are jobs readily available for MPH degrees? I'm honestly not sure.
Anonymous wrote: There are not many jobs in either one of those fields. If you wanted to be a special ed teacher that would be one thing, but what would someone do with a degree in "special needs and inclusion" that doesn't involve teaching?
Anonymous wrote:If you're introverted and quiet, yet worried about stability and salary, do accounting. Those other fields will chew you up and spit you out.
Anonymous wrote:Would those degrees actually help you get a job?
Have you thought about nursing?