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Best Career Matches As Per AI Recommendation

FayetheADHDsquirrel

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So, basically I put in a lot of information including childhood hobbies, current pass times, favorite subjects, and my strongest score on the 12th grade standardized test complete with what that score was. Then I asked for the top 5 career matches.
The results were -
1. Research Scientist (specializing in a lab or technical field)
2. Data Scientist
3. Forensic Scientist
4. Technical Writer (in a technical or medical field)
5. Biomedical Engineer

I read the list to my Mama and she said that it made sense.
I found it interesting that the career which I have been considering for quite some time now was on the list.
 
Do it. We certainly need more scientists. I definitely want to know more scientists to bug for research things, too, haha.
 
Do it. We certainly need more scientists. I definitely want to know more scientists to bug for research things, too, haha.
I don't think it usually works quite like that. I don't think most scientists work from a suggestion box or anything like that.😅
 
I was able to combine my knowledge in the sciences and skills in Statistical Design of Experiments in a career optimizing and validating drug manufacturing processes. For that my technical writing skills were also important as the FDA reviewed my work, and the reports were essentially legal documents demonstrating compliance with the Code of Federal Regulations title 21, Part 211. Along the way I was published in Molecular Genetics and Experimental Pathology and received a patent for a novel method of processing Cyclotron targets.
 
With job titles like "scientist or engineer", aptitude likely must be supplemented with the possession of a college degree. With a possible exception of data scientist and technical writer.

At least those were the responses I got with Duck Duck Go's AI Search Assist.

Though I knew of two persons in my web design vocational training program who intended to seek a job as a technical writer, who only wanted web design as a skill on their resume. One of them did find employment as a technical writer around the same time I was hired to do web design, circa 1999.

Though I suspect she already had a bachelors degree in English, sometimes a requirement for a technical writer depending on the employer. (At least at that time). Like myself, we were in our 40s and already had a professional background, but intending to seek another type of career.

In that respect, from that perspective it's never too late.
 
Right now, I'm simply trying to get a job. I've applied to a range of positions from clothing store to floral shop to card design company (I do photography, calligraphy, and poetry as hobbies as well) to library assistant (I love doing research and I love actual books. I love the smell of old books.) So far, I have been unable to get a job. If I can get an introductory level lab job, that would be ausome. Last year I thought I was about to get an internship at a water lab, but it didn't happen. I can't limit my search to scientific fields right now though. If I can get a job, I plan to try to get a scholarship to go back to school and earn my Bachelor's degree. I have already been looking at a few different colleges, but I have to get a job first.
 
Sounds good you have a rudimentary plan. Do not be scared to look outside the box., out side your town, state, or even country. put lots of pokers in the fire. One will catch.
 
I see that there are completely online degree options as well; however, it's hard to see how you would learn the scientific techniques without hands on practice.
 
Get education first, then experience. Once you some education get more experience like climbing a ladder, I got mine by accident not knowing I was on the spectrum started with three year college diploma, then got second two year diploma. then got certificates in quality to management level, and finally certificate on how to be supervisor. A lot to no avail, retired now. Made for interesting career. Hopefully I can help others like us, via my journey.
 
Get education first, then experience. Once you some education get more experience like climbing a ladder, I got mine by accident not knowing I was on the spectrum started with three year college diploma, then got second two year diploma. then got certificates in quality to management level, and finally certificate on how to be supervisor. A lot to no avail, retired now. Made for interesting career. Hopefully I can help others like us, via my journey.
I meant that I thought schooling programs that include the hands on learning elements would be much more beneficial than what an online program could provide.
 
Right now, I'm simply trying to get a job. I've applied to a range of positions from clothing store to floral shop to card design company (I do photography, calligraphy, and poetry as hobbies as well) to library assistant (I love doing research and I love actual books. I love the smell of old books.) So far, I have been unable to get a job. If I can get an introductory level lab job, that would be ausome. Last year I thought I was about to get an internship at a water lab, but it didn't happen. I can't limit my search to scientific fields right now though. If I can get a job, I plan to try to get a scholarship to go back to school and earn my Bachelor's degree. I have already been looking at a few different colleges, but I have to get a job first.
Why do clothing stores and floral shops reject people? Are they fully staffed or is there actually a set of requirements to join?
 
when I graduated college I had no idea where I would end up. Applied for any position i was remotely qualified for,
had three year diploma in chemical engineering technology, while concurrently had earned enough credits for a two year microbiology diploma. First position after a number of interviews, was as a lab technician on a coil coating line painting aluminum siding. crappy pay, While their I became buddies with a supervisor. He told me something interesting. Look around everywhere notice most things are painted. If you build a career centered on painting. you will always have a job, He told me about a another college offering night school courses on paint manufacturing. I signed up first a basic certificate then an advanced certificate, which got me a better position as a lab technician at an appliance manufacturing facility in the paint lab. This position ended plant closing due to free trade deal, Still taking paint manufacturing courses working toward two year diploma . Meet lady who needed lab partner for lab, Her employer was seeking to fill a position as someone had retired, Testing lab, open position was for testing paint. That's how it works. Incidentally she got $500 for referring me. Lasted eighteen months not good fit as my training was in taking care of a process. One day I saw a article in a trade magazine at the library how Ford wanted to try out a reverse onus system with their chemical supplier. At the appliance plant I had become familiar with zinc phosphating. Knew the chemical company. So just wrote a letter stating I'm the guy your looking for to set up the reverse onus, Took me eighteen months. So successful, other process and competitors switched over.
 
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Why do clothing stores and floral shops reject people? Are they fully staffed or is there actually a set of requirements to join?

It's almost always a competitive process. Whatever skills and experience one has is being weighed against other applicants. Plus one's ability to come across well in the interview process itself.
 
Why do clothing stores and floral shops reject people? Are they fully staffed or is there actually a set of requirements to join?
There is a criteria they're looking for, as with any position. Predominantly they're after a particular personality type, the "salesman". Someone who not only has natural charisma but also has little moral integrity. There's a secondary criteria as well because no matter how much idealists want to argue against it, sex sells. Good looking applicants male or female will also get preference over others.
 
There is a criteria they're looking for, as with any position. Predominantly they're after a particular personality type, the "salesman". Someone who not only has natural charisma but also has little moral integrity. There's a secondary criteria as well because no matter how much idealists want to argue against it, sex sells. Good looking applicants male or female will also get preference over others.
NT's can tell we're on the spectrum. think we're weird or creepy.
 
NT's can tell we're on the spectrum. think we're weird or creepy.
I think that is part of the reason I don't have another job yet. I'm not sure I could pass as completely neurotypical if I had to. The hyperactive zany bursts that I have described are mostly controllable and almost always limited to being at home; however, I still seem "off" the rest of the time apparently. There is a bit of awkwardness in formal situations and my interests don't generally match up with those of my peers. When a topic of interest comes up, I frequently get called down for talking too fast, too loud, and going on too long. When a topic of interest is not involved, it can sometimes be hard to think of very much to say and there can be a lot of awkward silences. I am also realizing that for some reason people don't want to know if a screw is coming loose on their door panel or if they have a spider hanging out in the corner of their room. I would want to be informed of these things myself, but people seem to find it annoying and problematic.
 
I think that is part of the reason I don't have another job yet. I'm not sure I could pass as completely neurotypical if I had to. The hyperactive zany bursts that I have described are mostly controllable and almost always limited to being at home; however, I still seem "off" the rest of the time apparently. There is a bit of awkwardness in formal situations and my interests don't generally match up with those of my peers. When a topic of interest comes up, I frequently get called down for talking too fast, too loud, and going on too long. When a topic of interest is not involved, it can sometimes be hard to think of very much to say and there can be a lot of awkward silences. I am also realizing that for some reason people don't want to know if a screw is coming loose on their door panel or if they have a spider hanging out in the corner of their room. I would want to be informed of these things myself, but people seem to find it annoying and problematic.
To be fair, I think it's not so much that you pointed out a screw or a spider, it's that it was not important at the time. (That's a guess, I don't know the exact situation so I could be wrong here).

But the reason I say that is because there's a guy who works in my clinic who I strongly suspect is ND. Most people in my clinic are pretty accepting, but they are still often irritated by this guy because the things he says and does come across as rude and self-absorbed.

For example, one of my coworkers was talking about a book she had read recently and how much it impacted her and how much she enjoyed it. She described the book and the story. Rather than saying something like "wow that sounds like you really enjoyed it," or something to that effect, instead he pointed out a word she had pronounced incorrectly, and that was it.

This guy also often complains that he's not well liked... but it's hard to explain to someone like that who has apparently little in the way of self-awareness, that what he did in that moment was to completely ignore her entire message and her bid for social connection, and instead criticized the way she pronounced one word. He understood what she was saying, he just chose to point out an error that ultimately makes no difference to anyone but himself. Why? Because it's apparently important to him.

I think errors make us uncomfortable so we like to have things just so. It's the black and white thinking. NTs don't do that. That one word is not necessarily the point of the message. The message is actually the enjoyment of the book. It's reading the other person's excitement and emotion. And we miss that and stomp on it by appearing to be critical.

I'm sure this has nothing to do with spiders or loose screws though. Maybe it was just the wrong time.
 

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