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who has gone to school Gruaduated,and have a hardtime?

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  • Holland
    replied
    Originally posted by chadthestampede View Post
    My fiance is a nurse and she got a job right out of college, earns ~60k or so now. Nursing is in high demand around here. Maybe just not out west.



    I on the other hand graduated with secondary teaching certification and now I work in parts at a dealership. Feels bad man.

    What brand dealership?

    Leave a comment:


  • RondoAcapriccio
    replied
    Originally posted by efficient View Post
    my girlfriend graduated 2 years ago to be a registered nurse and still can't find a job. she's thinking of going back to her old career in social work. the sad part is that she still has to pay the nursing which is like 60k+. Some of her classmates that graduated with her are in the same boat with her.

    As for myself I've gone/still going to the community trade tech for automotive, i enjoy it but I'm thinking this might be the wrong career.
    2 years and no job as an RN?? Something is missing, either she isn't looking hard enough or you need to move. Same with Engineering, the jobs are out there, but not always where people want to live.

    Leave a comment:


  • nando
    replied
    Can't believe some of the shady crap your government gets away with.

    oh wait, yes I can. ours does the same thing. :(

    Leave a comment:


  • Todd Black 88
    replied
    Originally posted by efficient View Post
    my girlfriend graduated 2 years ago to be a registered nurse and still can't find a job. she's thinking of going back to her old career in social work. the sad part is that she still has to pay the nursing which is like 60k+. Some of her classmates that graduated with her are in the same boat with her.

    As for myself I've gone/still going to the community trade tech for automotive, i enjoy it but I'm thinking this might be the wrong career.
    Tell her to get specialized in something beyond the basic RN. There is a better chance of finding something if you stand out.

    Originally posted by nando View Post
    Move to Canada? there's a huge nurse shortage in BC. heck, even here, there's not enough but the pay isn't very good for reasons too complicated to explain here. Cost of living is probably comparable to LA (actually cheaper if you factor public services and health care), but of course it's a bit colder. :p
    Lol. Things are changing.

    There is physically a major shortage of nurses here, but to solve the problem and the bad press surrounding it, the BC provincial government has just deleted the vacant positions completely. No shortage anymore, just the existing nurses have more load to carry.

    My wife has been an RN BSN for 16 years now, has a tonne of specialty courses, is her worksite union steward, and has never been without a job with at least one other job opportunity sitting on the wayside.

    15 years in she makes about $90k per year, with 8 weeks off per annum.

    Leave a comment:


  • chadthestampede
    replied
    Originally posted by efficient View Post
    my girlfriend graduated 2 years ago to be a registered nurse and still can't find a job. she's thinking of going back to her old career in social work. the sad part is that she still has to pay the nursing which is like 60k+. Some of her classmates that graduated with her are in the same boat with her.

    As for myself I've gone/still going to the community trade tech for automotive, i enjoy it but I'm thinking this might be the wrong career.
    My fiance is a nurse and she got a job right out of college, earns ~60k or so now. Nursing is in high demand around here. Maybe just not out west.

    I on the other hand graduated with secondary teaching certification and now I work in parts at a dealership. Feels bad man.

    Leave a comment:


  • nando
    replied
    Originally posted by efficient View Post
    my girlfriend graduated 2 years ago to be a registered nurse and still can't find a job. she's thinking of going back to her old career in social work. the sad part is that she still has to pay the nursing which is like 60k+. Some of her classmates that graduated with her are in the same boat with her.

    As for myself I've gone/still going to the community trade tech for automotive, i enjoy it but I'm thinking this might be the wrong career.
    Move to Canada? there's a huge nurse shortage in BC. heck, even here, there's not enough but the pay isn't very good for reasons too complicated to explain here. Cost of living is probably comparable to LA (actually cheaper if you factor public services and health care), but of course it's a bit colder. :p

    Leave a comment:


  • efficient
    replied
    my girlfriend graduated 2 years ago to be a registered nurse and still can't find a job. she's thinking of going back to her old career in social work. the sad part is that she still has to pay the nursing which is like 60k+. Some of her classmates that graduated with her are in the same boat with her.

    As for myself I've gone/still going to the community trade tech for automotive, i enjoy it but I'm thinking this might be the wrong career.

    Leave a comment:


  • ncsubowen
    replied
    As soul-crushing as it is, high demand fields tend to be business or sales related. If you don't like sales and you're not smart enough for engineering, the best potential field is in IT or accounting. I graduated with a 4 year degree in business IT, and now I'm in IT audit for a big accounting firm. I get recruitment emails daily through Linkedin, but it's all for the same job I'm doing now at around the same pay, so there's not much point in jumping ship.

    There is definitely a lot of demand at the entry-level here though, because the promotion structure in this industry is basically either you're moving up with experience or you need to get out.

    Leave a comment:


  • z31maniac
    replied
    Originally posted by kendogg View Post
    Funny, I've been on LInkedIn for a few years, and never once gotten anything. I know people that have gotten jobs via LinkedIN. No idea how.
    Because those people have skills desired by employers. If you don't have the skills desired by employers, talk to recruiting agencies and see what they are looking for.

    I get hits now and then from LinkedIn and other recruiting agencies, but anymore I've put myself in a position to be nearly topped out in salary in my field/region, likely until I break the 10years of experience point, which is 3.5 years away.

    Leave a comment:


  • decay
    replied
    Originally posted by RondoAcapriccio View Post
    Commssioning gets you in, but the branch will tell you what you are going to do. For the most part only officers with specialized degrees such as engineering or medical related will work in a MOS relating to their degree.
    That's pretty much what I said...

    Leave a comment:


  • RondoAcapriccio
    replied
    Originally posted by decay View Post
    I can only speak for the Army, but they don't care what your degree is in, and it will have no bearing on what unit ..

    1LT I deployed to Iraq with was a business major, in a commo unit.
    It all depends how you commission. OCS is much more selective especially today. Commssioning gets you in, but the branch will tell you what you are going to do. For the most part only officers with specialized degrees such as engineering or medical related will work in a MOS relating to their degree.

    The problem is people are not planning for their future while in university, then they graduate and.think "oh sh-t what have i done to secure a job."

    Leave a comment:


  • matthugie
    replied
    Originally posted by justin_l_ View Post
    FWIW I never had any secondary schooling, although I had a two year vocational course while I was in high school. I'm in my late twenties and I'm currently making 60k. My work will pay for college, they give 5 paid hours off each week, and will give you 5k in company stock when you get a 2 year degree and 10k if you get a 4+ year degree.
    UTC? Pretty sweet deal though, I'd definitely be on that.

    Leave a comment:


  • Jorgen
    replied
    Originally posted by justin_l_ View Post
    FWIW I never had any secondary schooling, although I had a two year vocational course while I was in high school. I'm in my late twenties and I'm currently making 60k. My work will pay for college, they give 5 paid hours off each week, and will give you 5k in company stock when you get a 2 year degree and 10k if you get a 4+ year degree.

    Those are some nice added bonus' take them if you can handle the time to go to school. I let me current company pay for my first masters and working on them paying for an MBA but I don't get shit like stock etc when done.

    Leave a comment:


  • justin_l_
    replied
    FWIW I never had any secondary schooling, although I had a two year vocational course while I was in high school. I'm in my late twenties and I'm currently making 60k. My work will pay for college, they give 5 paid hours off each week, and will give you 5k in company stock when you get a 2 year degree and 10k if you get a 4+ year degree.

    Leave a comment:


  • kendogg
    replied
    Originally posted by xAZxE30x View Post
    Post your resume on linked in, and other job websites. I get atleast 5 emails a week asking if I'll call for an interview. Mostly garbage but there's been some good ones


    Funny, I've been on LInkedIn for a few years, and never once gotten anything. I know people that have gotten jobs via LinkedIN. No idea how.

    Leave a comment:

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