Anonymous wrote:1. Plumbing
2. skilled HVAC mechanics
3. any and every HEALTH profession associated with Veterans Affairs
4. engineers of all kinds
Anonymous wrote:Admin. I was on the job market recently, and I got an interview for EVERY job I applied for. I totally had my pick, and I'm making as much or more than most of the careers you mention with truly stellar benefits. 40 hour weeks, lots of flexibility because I chose a family friendly company.
I know people scoff, but for a good salary and a good job to have when you have a household and family to manage, administration (executive assistant, office management) is pretty sweet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:learn ABA Therapy and Speech Therapy and you're golden. 50% of our kids will be autistic in the next 50 years.
What do you have to do to become certified in ABA therapy? A special degree?
I'd be careful about this. As funds get tighter and the evidence on what therapies work evolves there will be more certifications for these folks and I suspect eventually they will go the way of PTs, etc. who need advanced degrees. Years ago you could get a bachelor's in PT and get a job, now you need a master's and people are saying in the next few years you will need a doctorate. I would recommend getting a recognized degree like speech therapy, OT, etc. and not just get certified in ABA.
And let's face it, you have to be pretty committed and a special kind of person to devote a career to working with autistic kids. Not everyone is cut out for that. I imagine it would be very hard and draining. It's not something to get into because you need a job quick.
Anonymous wrote:If you've been out of the work force -- you'll need to start at the bottom. Unpaid internships will get you where you need to go to get experience in a field of interest to you. Or, you could open a childcare center...those will always be in demand. Women pay dearly for taking time off.
An earlier poster was right about plumbers and engineers being in demand. There aren't many other "full-proof" careers. Nursing isn't a bad option. You could work part-time to earn funds for your family. You could also start a concierge service for neighbors and do the duties no one else wants to do such as lawn care, cleaning the house, picking up dry cleaning, cleaning the pets, etc. (multi-purpose errands gal).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:learn ABA Therapy and Speech Therapy and you're golden. 50% of our kids will be autistic in the next 50 years.
What do you have to do to become certified in ABA therapy? A special degree?
Anonymous wrote:learn ABA Therapy and Speech Therapy and you're golden. 50% of our kids will be autistic in the next 50 years.
Anonymous wrote:learn ABA Therapy and Speech Therapy and you're golden. 50% of our kids will be autistic in the next 50 years.[/quote]
Do you have references that back up this speculation? It sounds a lot like the old crap-toid "50% of the population will be gay in the next 50 years"