CAREERS AND ED “Looking into the future is difficult” says Larry Bliss, the director of academic advising and career education at California State University’s East Bay campus. “Ten years ago, would we have been very supportive of a student who said that she wanted to make a career out of designing web pages for businesses? I think not. But today, that’s a pretty handsomely paid job.”
The best advice Bliss tells the Guardian he can offer to college students is to pick a major they like and think about the transferable skills that each course of study will impart.
According to the Bureau of Labor’s predictions, not all of the US job markets with the largest projected growth (outside of the medical field) require a significant academic resume. If you’re after high salary jobs, stay in school — the nursing, technical consulting, and computer system jobs predicted to see salary increases all require a little more educational incubation.
INDUSTRIES WITH LARGEST PREDICTED GROWTH
All figures in parentheses reflect predicted growth through 2020
1. Personal care aides (70.5%)/home care aides (69.4%)
2. Medical secretaries (41.3%)
3. Medical assistants (30.9%)
4. Retail sales (26%)
5. Physicians and surgeons (24.4%)
6. Receptionists and information clerks (23.7%)
7. Construction (21.3%)
8. Landscaper/groundskeeper (20.9%)
9. Heavy truck driver (206%)
10. Childcare workers (20.4%)
11. Accountants, bookkeepers, auditors (15.7%)
JOBS WITH MOST SALARY GROWTH PREDICTED
1. Home health care aide (61%)
2. Management, scientific, technical consultants (4.7%)
3. Child Daycare Services (2.6%)
4. Nursing and residential care (2.4%)
5. Computer systems design (3.9%)
6. Construction (2.9%)
7. Architectural engineering (2.5%)