Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My neighbors' dd went to a regional college. She's starting at 90k/year as a police officer in a beautiful, safe towns. She'll be great as well and exactly who should become a cop.
Ummm... this doesn't ring true. Starting salaries for police officers are not that high.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Electrician, plumber, carpenter, appliance repair, social media influencer, lawyers, modeling,executive assistants etc.
Almost all high-paying lawyer jobs are restricted to those who are extremely academically inclined--you need to get good grades in college and perform well on the LSAT, get into a good school, and then get good grades in law school.
Many lawyers who attended a local law school where LSAT was optional and acceptance rate 95%, are making decent living in my area.
Anonymous wrote:EQ has a much higher than IQ, and I have three brothers and three sisters (Asian family). Five of us attended UVA and became software engineers with very good salaries. One of my brothers did not study in high school, and graduated with a 2.8 GPA and 1050 on the SAT, but he was a recruited athlete by the University of Carolina. However, he has a very high EQ because he knows how to read people and adapt regardless of the environment. After graduation, due to his EQ and athletic connections, he got a job in finance. He is now a CFO at a non-profit, and he is making over 1.7M a year vs. 185K a year for a typical software engineer.
A person with a high IQ and low EQ is just another workabee. He/she will do OK just do not expect to be successful. YMMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Electrician, plumber, carpenter, appliance repair, social media influencer, lawyers, modeling,executive assistants etc.
Almost all high-paying lawyer jobs are restricted to those who are extremely academically inclined--you need to get good grades in college and perform well on the LSAT, get into a good school, and then get good grades in law school.
Generally that’s right, at least for BigLaw type lawyers that represent companies, but I know some really stupid lawyers who went to medocre schools but make a ton of money as plaintiffs side lawyers. I can’t explain the business model but they seem to be doing very well despite not being at all academically inclined.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My neighbors' dd went to a regional college. She's starting at 90k/year as a police officer in a beautiful, safe towns. She'll be great as well and exactly who should become a cop.
Ummm... this doesn't ring true. Starting salaries for police officers are not that high.
Anonymous wrote:My neighbors' dd went to a regional college. She's starting at 90k/year as a police officer in a beautiful, safe towns. She'll be great as well and exactly who should become a cop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Electrician, plumber, carpenter, appliance repair, social media influencer, lawyers, modeling,executive assistants etc.
Almost all high-paying lawyer jobs are restricted to those who are extremely academically inclined--you need to get good grades in college and perform well on the LSAT, get into a good school, and then get good grades in law school.
Generally that’s right, at least for BigLaw type lawyers that represent companies, but I know some really stupid lawyers who went to medocre schools but make a ton of money as plaintiffs side lawyers. I can’t explain the business model but they seem to be doing very well despite not being at all academically inclined.
Anonymous wrote:Childcare. First as sitters, than nanny then home daycare and eventually commercial daycares for children.
Also eldercare, day and boarding centers, at home care etc are in demand.
Pet care services and day or extended boarding centers.