Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised nobody suggested IT. Do a simple QA certification, plenty of centers in NoVa, will take 4-5 months and you can get a 60-70k job and most probably WFH. A fiend of mine just did this, she is 40 and had no prior work experience at all, now she has a 70k full WFH job. Something to think and research.
What is QA certification? Is it more like admin work? I always associate IT work with coding, which isn't for everyone, and you won't get good at it in a few months (unless you have natural inclination and talent for it). If it were easy then every idiot would apply, 70K remote after such short training sounds too good to be true without some connections..
QA is basically a tester.
Quality Assurance.
-someone in tech
Also don't go to those tech job fairs. Some dumbass on here recommended it to me and they only wanted engineers.
oh, yea, no, QA testers don't get recruited at tech fairs. That was a dumb recommendation. You can look for those jobs online.
However, OP being a sahm for that many years with no tech background isn't getting a QA tester job.
She can.. My mother did this in her mid 50s. She took a course or more in a local community college and started working contracts. I think taking a course helped because this opens the doors to potential work, but This was a while ago, like 15-20 years ago? I forgot a lot of it. She was making something like 40-50/hr I believe.. don't remember much. I just remember she had to take SQL (data query language), and she got good at it quickly, so this allowed her to get more jobs and higher paying ones. She was in STEM before in her country, so tech stuff came easy to her, but she had zero experience in the field, she was waitressing prior to this job. Ironically waitressing paid a lot more with tips, but she couldn't physically do this anymore and didn't want to do low wage jobs either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised nobody suggested IT. Do a simple QA certification, plenty of centers in NoVa, will take 4-5 months and you can get a 60-70k job and most probably WFH. A fiend of mine just did this, she is 40 and had no prior work experience at all, now she has a 70k full WFH job. Something to think and research.
What is QA certification? Is it more like admin work? I always associate IT work with coding, which isn't for everyone, and you won't get good at it in a few months (unless you have natural inclination and talent for it). If it were easy then every idiot would apply, 70K remote after such short training sounds too good to be true without some connections..
QA is basically a tester.
Quality Assurance.
-someone in tech
A tester of what exactly that it doesn't require much skill or experience? Is this something related to consumer products interface testing? Or running scripts that someone else created and doing more of an admin job?
In my experience proper testing can be more complicated than writing code. Not only you need to understand what code does, you also have to have great analytical data skills to create test data sets and challenge the code to see if logic breaks. This is probably not the type of QA testing you are referring to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP was a sahm for the past how many decades, and is 50 years old. She is not going to get a job that pays more than $20/hr, even $20/hr will be lucky.
You can get a job as a receptionist at a small business that may pay $16 to $18/hour.
-52 yr old woman
This is often what happens, our society is punitive towards women who choose to raise their kids themselves and prioritize family and home. If you don't marry well and secure a nice divorce package or something befalls your husband you are SOL. Even if you have a degree, it can't help you. You have to keep working and raising kids, and part time jobs aren't easy to find and not available for professional jobs until you are so well established that you can call your schedule or consult PT. no wonder younger women are deciding to stay childless more and more.
The solution is not to stay childless, it’s to not become a sahm. Keep working ladies, even if you have children!
The best is to have kids early when you have much more energy to work and have kids and are junior in your career and can exit and return, or you can work periodically. Taking 1-3 years off is often not nearly as detrimental to your career as taking 20 years off from the workplace. Once your kids are teens you can lean into your career
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP was a sahm for the past how many decades, and is 50 years old. She is not going to get a job that pays more than $20/hr, even $20/hr will be lucky.
You can get a job as a receptionist at a small business that may pay $16 to $18/hour.
-52 yr old woman
This is often what happens, our society is punitive towards women who choose to raise their kids themselves and prioritize family and home. If you don't marry well and secure a nice divorce package or something befalls your husband you are SOL. Even if you have a degree, it can't help you. You have to keep working and raising kids, and part time jobs aren't easy to find and not available for professional jobs until you are so well established that you can call your schedule or consult PT. no wonder younger women are deciding to stay childless more and more.
The solution is not to stay childless, it’s to not become a sahm. Keep working ladies, even if you have children!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised nobody suggested IT. Do a simple QA certification, plenty of centers in NoVa, will take 4-5 months and you can get a 60-70k job and most probably WFH. A fiend of mine just did this, she is 40 and had no prior work experience at all, now she has a 70k full WFH job. Something to think and research.
What is QA certification? Is it more like admin work? I always associate IT work with coding, which isn't for everyone, and you won't get good at it in a few months (unless you have natural inclination and talent for it). If it were easy then every idiot would apply, 70K remote after such short training sounds too good to be true without some connections..
QA is basically a tester.
Quality Assurance.
-someone in tech
Also don't go to those tech job fairs. Some dumbass on here recommended it to me and they only wanted engineers.
oh, yea, no, QA testers don't get recruited at tech fairs. That was a dumb recommendation. You can look for those jobs online.
However, OP being a sahm for that many years with no tech background isn't getting a QA tester job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP was a sahm for the past how many decades, and is 50 years old. She is not going to get a job that pays more than $20/hr, even $20/hr will be lucky.
You can get a job as a receptionist at a small business that may pay $16 to $18/hour.
-52 yr old woman
This is often what happens, our society is punitive towards women who choose to raise their kids themselves and prioritize family and home. If you don't marry well and secure a nice divorce package or something befalls your husband you are SOL. Even if you have a degree, it can't help you. You have to keep working and raising kids, and part time jobs aren't easy to find and not available for professional jobs until you are so well established that you can call your schedule or consult PT. no wonder younger women are deciding to stay childless more and more.
Anonymous wrote:OP was a sahm for the past how many decades, and is 50 years old. She is not going to get a job that pays more than $20/hr, even $20/hr will be lucky.
You can get a job as a receptionist at a small business that may pay $16 to $18/hour.
-52 yr old woman
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP -- would you qualify to be a school counselor? What would that take? Seems like a better job than being a teacher, and would have a better salary than a teacher's assistant. Less intense daily interaction with so many kids as a counselor.
Or maybe something administrative -- it really just depends on how much $$ you actually need. Is this the money you need to pay the mortgage, or just a job to start contributing to social security?
This is a licensed position that requires significant graduate work in school psychology.
What? A school psychologist and a school counselor are 2 different jobs with completely different training requirements. Most of you have no idea what you’re talking about. Please stick to commenting on your own profession.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised nobody suggested IT. Do a simple QA certification, plenty of centers in NoVa, will take 4-5 months and you can get a 60-70k job and most probably WFH. A fiend of mine just did this, she is 40 and had no prior work experience at all, now she has a 70k full WFH job. Something to think and research.
What is QA certification? Is it more like admin work? I always associate IT work with coding, which isn't for everyone, and you won't get good at it in a few months (unless you have natural inclination and talent for it). If it were easy then every idiot would apply, 70K remote after such short training sounds too good to be true without some connections..
QA is basically a tester.
Quality Assurance.
-someone in tech
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP -- would you qualify to be a school counselor? What would that take? Seems like a better job than being a teacher, and would have a better salary than a teacher's assistant. Less intense daily interaction with so many kids as a counselor.
Or maybe something administrative -- it really just depends on how much $$ you actually need. Is this the money you need to pay the mortgage, or just a job to start contributing to social security?
This is a licensed position that requires significant graduate work in school psychology.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I second the preschool option. They always need subs, aides and administrators. I would check with private schools as well.
but they get paid nothing. I think these are dead end jobs for most people. Substitute teaching is the worst. The pay is a joke.
Can these jobs be used as jumping boards to some other jobs? If you have no resume, and a general degree without special training that you got decades ago you gotta start somewhere. I don't think she can jump into a "career" type of jobs right away unless she has some specialized skills and connections or she goes for a new degree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I second the preschool option. They always need subs, aides and administrators. I would check with private schools as well.
but they get paid nothing. I think these are dead end jobs for most people. Substitute teaching is the worst. The pay is a joke.
Anonymous wrote:OP -- would you qualify to be a school counselor? What would that take? Seems like a better job than being a teacher, and would have a better salary than a teacher's assistant. Less intense daily interaction with so many kids as a counselor.
Or maybe something administrative -- it really just depends on how much $$ you actually need. Is this the money you need to pay the mortgage, or just a job to start contributing to social security?