Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just to give OP some perspective, when our 2023 HS grad started college (Fall 2023), at drop-off there were a few sessions for parents. One thing I remember them saying at one of them, "the jobs that your college kids will have after college, don't exist yet."
I believe this
For most kids that’s simply not true.
Anonymous wrote:Just to give OP some perspective, when our 2023 HS grad started college (Fall 2023), at drop-off there were a few sessions for parents. One thing I remember them saying at one of them, "the jobs that your college kids will have after college, don't exist yet."
I believe this
Anonymous wrote:OP here,
Someone, not here, said data science. Any thoughts on that? I feel like it would play to his strengths.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a sophomore who would like to have a comfortable lifestyle. He’s a smart kid, who does well in school, who likes a comfortable lifestyle. He thinks he would be happier with a job he “didn’t hate” that gave him $ to do what he likes on the weekends, than a job he loves with uncertain income, or one with long hours.
He does well in school, math comes easily to him. He’s wondered about careers in data, finance, etc . . . Someone told him patent attorney is a good choice if you want interesting work and a good life style.
Any suggestions for majors and careers that might be a fit?
If you want to be a patent attorney, you probably want an engineering degree.
The best paid patent attorneys are probably litigators.
The venn diagram of engineers that would also make good litigators is pretty small. You are a rare talent and you will be paid like you are a rare talent if you pursue patent law.
Lol. I think many engineers could make decent litigators, but would they want to be? They could do briefing but may be more of a second chair presence. Litigation is not typically for someone who just wants to chill, though.
Anonymous wrote:OP here,
Someone, not here, said data science. Any thoughts on that? I feel like it would play to his strengths.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So he basically wants money but doesn’t want to work hard? Isn’t that what you are really saying, OP?
That’s the dream! Don’t be jealous you didn’t think of this.
Dermatologist or orthodontist. Hard to get into but the careers aren’t as stressful as other kinds of medicine. But you make bank.
Anonymous wrote:Physician if you can handle the stress. 3 years residency do not terrible. I make 200k no weekends no nights no call and flexible with the kids.