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Should I go for a Masters in a subject I know nothing in . . .??

HomeForumsWorkShould I go for a Masters in a subject I know nothing in . . .??

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  • #151586
    PearceHawk
    Participant

    Hi apples,

    I graduated high school 2 grades ahead at 15. Being a high school student getting ready to graduate was very uncomfortable. Here I was, a 15 year old senior, too young to hang out with the seniors that were 17/18 and too far ahead of people in the grades I passed, so it was difficult. I went on to get a degree in microbiology and got a job in a clinical lab at Stanford. I got real bored with it, so I pursued a masters in microbiology. I found out that this too was extremely boring to me. So I moved on, did various jobs, and eventually found myself in the medical field. Later I went in the military. I was in the Navy and was with a Marine intelligence  unit.Went to Iraq 3 times and Afghanistan once. When I was separated from the military I got involved with computer work, working for a civilian intelligence agency that gives support to various government agencies. Going into computer work were not even close to my interests and aspirations. The work I do now is amazing. Among other things. My point is, look around, look at other interests that you are attracted to, ones that your parents steered you away from. Like me, you might be totally surprised. Education is key. It’s fun. The more you know, well, the more you know. Go get it.

    #151632
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear apples333:

    I think that better you take one class in economics than to commit to degree in economics, so to get a feel for it. Notice that a big part of the education experience is who the teacher is. Who knows, maybe if you had an excellent math teacher early on, you would have enjoyed math.

    Doing well in a particular subject is in school, any school, is a combination of your previous experience with teachers and the topic, who the current teacher is (how he/she teaches, clear or vague, interactive or not, etc.), and the value you see in the topic for your future. You mentioned you don’t want to stay in sales forever. I would focus on what career change you want to make and take the practical steps toward that change, starting with checking out a class in economics.

    anita

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