Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a former lawyer (in house for most of my career). Never had kids. Got divorced very unexpectedly at 42, and after grieving for some time decided to look for the opportunity within the profound change to my life. I ended up taking the foreign service exam and am now a career FSO. I've lived in three countries and appreciate the work, the people, and the adventure. My friends thought I was crazy at the time, but they've also visited me in places like Athens since then...
This is my dream job.
Anonymous wrote:I am a former lawyer (in house for most of my career). Never had kids. Got divorced very unexpectedly at 42, and after grieving for some time decided to look for the opportunity within the profound change to my life. I ended up taking the foreign service exam and am now a career FSO. I've lived in three countries and appreciate the work, the people, and the adventure. My friends thought I was crazy at the time, but they've also visited me in places like Athens since then...
Anonymous wrote:Becoming an OG tutor is very expensive. After you take the classes you have to pay a mentor. It ends up being about $8K.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a lawyer turned SAHM and over several years and two degrees I transitioned into working in oncology clinical trials. The money is not great by DCUM standards but I LOVE it. I barely worked before I had kids and I was extremely daunted about restarting my career, but I did and and you can too!
Curious- What’s was your role with these trials?
I’m a Clinical Research Coordinator- so I screen patients, enroll them and manage their treatment, as well as reporting all the data to the study sponsor.
Can I ask which degrees you have to get in order to apply for jobs like this? I have a degree in biology but it's been 5 years since I quit to stay home and I'd love to build a second career like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got laid off due to COVID and decided to get trained as an Orton Gillingham tutor (dyslexia). I had always planned to be an adult literacy volunteer when I retired so I figured this would be a helpful skill set. I had never thought about language in such a systematic way.
It is the most amazing work! Supporting kids as they master literacy is so satisfying. I was recently invited to go back to my old role, and I really don’t want to go back to the corporate world.
Bless you!! To anyone considering I will say we are one family paying $1000+\month and it is worth it. The world needs more OG tutors and it helps my child so much.
Where does one find OG training?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a lawyer turned SAHM and over several years and two degrees I transitioned into working in oncology clinical trials. The money is not great by DCUM standards but I LOVE it. I barely worked before I had kids and I was extremely daunted about restarting my career, but I did and and you can too!
Curious- What’s was your role with these trials?
I’m a Clinical Research Coordinator- so I screen patients, enroll them and manage their treatment, as well as reporting all the data to the study sponsor.
Anonymous wrote:I got laid off due to COVID and decided to get trained as an Orton Gillingham tutor (dyslexia). I had always planned to be an adult literacy volunteer when I retired so I figured this would be a helpful skill set. I had never thought about language in such a systematic way.
It is the most amazing work! Supporting kids as they master literacy is so satisfying. I was recently invited to go back to my old role, and I really don’t want to go back to the corporate world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got laid off due to COVID and decided to get trained as an Orton Gillingham tutor (dyslexia). I had always planned to be an adult literacy volunteer when I retired so I figured this would be a helpful skill set. I had never thought about language in such a systematic way.
It is the most amazing work! Supporting kids as they master literacy is so satisfying. I was recently invited to go back to my old role, and I really don’t want to go back to the corporate world.
Bless you!! To anyone considering I will say we are one family paying $1000+\month and it is worth it. The world needs more OG tutors and it helps my child so much.
Anonymous wrote:I got laid off due to COVID and decided to get trained as an Orton Gillingham tutor (dyslexia). I had always planned to be an adult literacy volunteer when I retired so I figured this would be a helpful skill set. I had never thought about language in such a systematic way.
It is the most amazing work! Supporting kids as they master literacy is so satisfying. I was recently invited to go back to my old role, and I really don’t want to go back to the corporate world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got laid off due to COVID and decided to get trained as an Orton Gillingham tutor (dyslexia). I had always planned to be an adult literacy volunteer when I retired so I figured this would be a helpful skill set. I had never thought about language in such a systematic way.
It is the most amazing work! Supporting kids as they master literacy is so satisfying. I was recently invited to go back to my old role, and I really don’t want to go back to the corporate world.
Do you just volunteer or get paid as a tutor? Doesn’t matter if you don’t have education degree?
I don’t have an education degree. I do a combination of paid tutoring and free for kids whose families can’t afford it.