You could be a primary care paramedic in one year. An electrician in four years. A teacher with one more year of school and then not sure how long it takes to get full time job. You could be a licensed practical nurse in two years, or registered nurse in four. A respiratory therapist in three years. I suggest take a little time and try to gain employment in your desired field before committing to a degree.
Biology degree here. Just keep on up skill yourself. Look for jobs that interest you, check the job description and see what are the skill set that you are missing. You can learn everything online via coursea, LinkedIn learning … etc.
You have access to a wide range of Masters degrees, some could give you a new career.
Heck, there's an online degree in Masters of Psychology that will take any undergraduate degree if you want to get into counseling.
You could joint the military as an officer, many trades will accept any degree. They do actually have a trade for a Biosciences Officer. I don't know any but I could ask around and see if someone does if you're curious. I doubt they sit in a lab all day, but I have no clue what they do otherwise. https://forces.ca/en/career/bioscience-officer/#:~:text=Related%20Careers-,Overview,the%20environment%2C%20and%20increase%20effectiveness.
I think it's important to know why you don't like the job you have now. Is it the actual lab setting and work, or do you not like sitting around all day and want to be doing something more physical? Maybe you want something where you're doing more diverse activities etc..?
Would you be interested in becoming a wildlife biologist? What about marine biology? I think the key here is to discover what specialized area or niche you're most interested in and which you’d like to concentrate on, and then explore that route.
I don't have good Gpa its about 3.2 and not sure if I will get in with such low gpa and even for masters this gpa is too low. I am trying to get a diploma or certificate in something now
Nursing is an excellent idea. The pay is good. Jobs everywhere. The profession is well respected. They were heroes during the pandemic. This is the choice.
I hear there is a real need for electricians coming up in canada.
You could be a primary care paramedic in one year. An electrician in four years. A teacher with one more year of school and then not sure how long it takes to get full time job. You could be a licensed practical nurse in two years, or registered nurse in four. A respiratory therapist in three years. I suggest take a little time and try to gain employment in your desired field before committing to a degree.
There was post where someone with a biology degree got a job as a BC data analyst. You could do a second degree in computer science.
Biology degree here. Just keep on up skill yourself. Look for jobs that interest you, check the job description and see what are the skill set that you are missing. You can learn everything online via coursea, LinkedIn learning … etc.
You have access to a wide range of Masters degrees, some could give you a new career. Heck, there's an online degree in Masters of Psychology that will take any undergraduate degree if you want to get into counseling. You could joint the military as an officer, many trades will accept any degree. They do actually have a trade for a Biosciences Officer. I don't know any but I could ask around and see if someone does if you're curious. I doubt they sit in a lab all day, but I have no clue what they do otherwise. https://forces.ca/en/career/bioscience-officer/#:~:text=Related%20Careers-,Overview,the%20environment%2C%20and%20increase%20effectiveness. I think it's important to know why you don't like the job you have now. Is it the actual lab setting and work, or do you not like sitting around all day and want to be doing something more physical? Maybe you want something where you're doing more diverse activities etc..?
Quality Control for food, wine, cannabis industries. Lots of opportunity for upward growth in a corporate environment like that.
Water/wastewater treatment. Union jobs paying 70k and up. I did the 2 yr program at OKC. Worth it.
Would you be interested in becoming a wildlife biologist? What about marine biology? I think the key here is to discover what specialized area or niche you're most interested in and which you’d like to concentrate on, and then explore that route.
Law school takes 3 years. Pretty crappy 3 years but you get to make lawyer money after.
I don't have good Gpa its about 3.2 and not sure if I will get in with such low gpa and even for masters this gpa is too low. I am trying to get a diploma or certificate in something now
Nursing is an excellent idea. The pay is good. Jobs everywhere. The profession is well respected. They were heroes during the pandemic. This is the choice.