Thread: marine biology
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Old 07/13/2007, 07:30 PM
dots dots is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Sacramento, CA
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Quote:
Originally posted by DrDNA
If marine biology is your passion then follow it. But, if you want a decent career in science, you should plan on, at minimum, getting a master's degree. There is no doubt you could earn a lot more money being an engineer, attorney (God help you..), accountant, etc. But, if you have a job that you truly enjoy and look forward to doing every day, you will have a better quality of life than just getting a fat paycheck doing a job you don't have a passion for.

I have a BSc in marine ecology and PhD in genetics. Very few people who get 4 year degrees in marine biology end up doing anything marine biology-related for a career. With just a BS degree, you'd probably be making around $40K-ish a year, depending what you were doing and where you were working. With an advanced degree, you could double that, though not initially. Even many university faculty positions in the biological sciences (excluding medicine of course) only start people in the $40-50K range, though they top out well over $100K after several years. But, you also are under the gun to write grants and bring in money to support "academic big business" and have to deal with a lot of unversity beaurocratic BS. It is not the ivory tower most people believe it to be, and is the reason I work for another part of government.

Anyway, you'll get a lot of differing opinions!
Agreed, it is too bad that one can't always make a living on thier passion.

But if you are passionate about something and want a career of it, don't fight it and find a way to have your cake and eat it to buy finding something that deals with the subject and makes a steady living.

I grew up around hot rods and have a passion for cars that you would not believe. I would love to have opened up a shop, but its a niche market that is ever changing and may not be around when I was ready to retire..........So I got a Mechanical Engineering degree.

I found that I get the same creative outlet and satisfaction I have the last few years designing custom furniture for the State as I did with cars. In the end I found I just like to design and create and it didn't matter what it is. In fact, that is how I got into reefkeeping because I had to sell my 67 Camaro, move into an apartment and needed an outlet to keep from going crazy. This hobby did just that.

If the monetary thing is a concern, find the driving force behind your interest and see if that can be applied in a more lucritive field.

Cheers.....
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