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Serious Have any of you guys gotten serious jobs right out of high school?

  • Thread starter Deleted member 4999
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Deleted member 4999

Deleted member 4999

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I’m tired of working my shitty minimum wage job tbh
 
Define "right out?"

Either way, I recommend college. Go to it. If they let you in. Supposed to be some kinda coronavirus goin' around.
 
Define "right out?"

Either way, I recommend college. Go to it. If they let you in. Supposed to be some kinda coronavirus goin' around.
Like anywhere from the day you get out to 1 to 2 years. And idk about college it seems pretty useless and you would just go into debt
 
Like anywhere from the day you get out to 1 to 2 years. And idk about college it seems pretty useless and you would just go into debt

Then yes I did. Go to college, if you can afford it!
 
Go to college for what though, that is the question
To have money so you can afford some nice copes like traveling and fucking elite escorts. Also, go to STEM so you will not see to much foids there and in the work place.
 
im just tired of life tbh
 
Work for daddy's hedge fund
 
just rob old ladies
 
Yes. Hotel management for about a year, before going to uni.
 
Trying to get a work from home call center job rn.
 
I never worked tbh
 
i got one serious job in a glass factory when i was 24 and got fired after 6 days. the supervisor hated me, yelled at me and called me a baby and to "speed" up with the rest of the production line and the other workers laughed at me and stole my shit which got me in further trouble. i dropped out of high school at 15 after being threatened by chad who came by and stood at the front of my house. i neet'd around for about 8 years wondering and trying to figure what i'm going to do next. i did some community programs and all that. i wanted to be a park ranger but i held myself back and it was a stupid delusion i tbh

past year i wanted to be a truck driver, just me and the road, but i failed the driving test for it so it doesn't matter - i can't drive manual anyway which most trucks are in chadstralia. the moment i could have, i should have just gotten my security licence and i regret that now. this year (at 26) i was going to go for it but with coronavirus around fucking shit up and shutting shit down i feel i'll have to wait another year or actually go to melbourne to get it when things open up again smh

i suppose this can serve as advice for youngcels to get their security licence asap. we're not normgroids, we don't figure it out because we're ghosts, we barely exist.
 
Like anywhere from the day you get out to 1 to 2 years. And idk about college it seems pretty useless and you would just go into debt

Study the job market and look for the majors that have the highest transferability of job skills. Right now, the number one degree for that is computer science. But be forewarned: some schools are highly theoretical (emphasis on algorithm design, run time complexity, lots of discrete math, much of it that won't help you write programs better or make easy-to-use websites) and you won't learn much programming formally, since you'll be expected to just pick it up on the side.

I strongly recommend a degree in finance, economics, statistics, or applied math with a lot of programming courses on the side. Computer science, while a good degree on it's own, is too saturated in the job market, and employers will see you as a specialized tool for their needs, rather than somebody with a broader potential for lateral movement and growth.
 
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Study the job market and look for the majors that have the highest transferability of job skills. Right now, the number one degree for that is computer science. But be forewarned: some schools are highly theoretical (emphasis on algorithm design, run time complexity, lots of discrete math, much of it that won't help you write programs better or make easy-to-use websites) and you won't learn much programming formally, since you'll be expected to just pick it up on the side.

I strongly recommend a degree in finance, economics, statistics, or applied math with a lot of programming courses on the side. Computer science, while a good degree on it's own, is too saturated in the job market, and employers will see you as a specialized tool for their needs, rather than somebody with a broader potential for lateral movement and growth.
Thanks will bookmark for later
 

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