Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Education

Join the discussion on our Education forum.

Science degree..what have you done career wise

29 replies

ProfessorLayton1 · 10/09/2017 08:45

Just curious.. what have you done since graduation ?

OP posts:
SandBlue · 10/09/2017 08:57

Travelled around troubleshooting on factories, managed a lab, got my name on some patents when i was in R&D, then quit as they wouldn't reduce my hours or offer compressed hours when both kids were at school. Now a SAHM.

ProfessorLayton1 · 10/09/2017 08:59

should have added how much you earn as well?
I have done a vocational course so there was only one path and you knew what you were getting at..

OP posts:
Tilapia · 10/09/2017 19:37

I didn't study science at uni, but the people I know who did:

  • physics teacher, now headteacher of a secondary school
  • works in IT
  • owns his own business (specialist sports clothing and equipment)
Zodlebud · 11/09/2017 06:28

Chartered accountant!!!!

Bloke1976 · 11/09/2017 06:32

Physicist
Worked in research
Now a teacher
None of your business

toastymcjamface · 11/09/2017 11:01

I did a physics degree in 1990, then a PhD, and now I work in IT at a university, but part time, as I also do lots of voluntary work as a school governor and run a STEM club.

Salary is 48K (full time equivalent, but in practice I only do 0.5FTE), but could easily be higher if I wanted to manage people rather than 'just' be an analyst, or if I wanted to work in a different sector (which I don't at the moment - universities are family friendly working environments and full of interesting people).

I'm married to another physicist, who I met when we were recent graduates in our first job. We earned the same now, but he works for an oil company and earns 90K+. Again he could earn more if he was the managerial ladder-climbing type, but both of us prefer an easy life. He's usually home by 5.30pm and that's the way we both like it.

Neither of us have ever had any problem changing jobs - people are always impressed by STEM qualifications from good universities. So long as you're generally a sensible person with good emotional intelligence and can string a sentence together there's no excuse for not doing well in life once you have a science degree under your belt.

ProfessorLayton1 · 11/09/2017 13:44

Thank you
Bloke - we both are doctors so sort of science related but no idea what scientist do apart from academic work.
I did a stint in molecular biology but it was not for me although I enjoyed it .
My Dd wants to do STEM degree but she is constantly been told that she won't earn well and she has to be in lab all the times .
She is vaguely interested in Chemistry/ biology degree but feels that she does not have the passion some people have for their subjects. To be honest she is not passionate about anything else apart from when she argues about social inequality and feminism
SHe has just started her AS levels but so stressed that she is making a wrong choice.
This will help me to tell her that if she does not like basic science there are other jobs she can doSmile

OP posts:
reallyanotherone · 11/09/2017 13:55

A science degree will lead to as many opportunities as any other- graduate jobs, accountancy, law, finance etc.

Science wise, yes the pay is generally shit. Academia you need to really love it, short term contracts, competitive, low pay. There is research in industry which is much better paid.

The nhs is a fairly big employer, clinical scientists, researchers etc. Clinical trials too.

What about pharmacy? Good money, and can go into research and a phd at the end, or into hospital or community pharmacy. Lots specialise and research at the same time, so in chemotherapy or diabetes for example.

The police employ scientists in forensics, both lab, csi, and as researchers. Forensic it is a growing area.

I've never been brilliantly paid, but my research skills have meant i can find a job pretty much anywhere.

bumblingbovine49 · 11/09/2017 14:24

She sounds like I was at her age. I was passionate about social inequality and also the environment and not much else

I am now ancient (52 years old) but I did a degree in Chemistry with Management Studies at Kings College London (graduated in 1985).

I ended up working in various consultancy/market research agencies for about 20 years. You need to have a good eye for detail, be good with numbers, able to present your data in an interesting and coherent way both visually and verbally in presentations and reports

I did quite a lot of travelling to visit and present to clients and also a lot of very focused work analysing data at my desk. I also had to design research projects to meet client aims so would have to liaise with different sorts of service providers and be able to organise large multi country research projects.

I was earning around £50K (FT salary) in 2007. After DS was born in 2004, I moved to 3 days a week ( for £30K pa) then up to to 4 days a week (at £40K pa) . I was only able to go part time though because I had worked at the same company for more than 5 years when DS was born and they wanted to keep me.

Then we had the 2008 crash and the company I worked in went under. We then moved as a family and it proved impossible to find a part time job in the same work in the area we moved to area.

My choice was to change the type of work I did or to get a FT job commuting between 1-2 hours away each way. As Ds was still small and I didn't want to work full time, with over an hour commute each way, I applied for and got an admin job at a local university at a fraction of my previous salary I them moved to another admin role in the same university about 3 years later and now, have moved to a full time role at the same place in a business/market analyst role.

I got this last role because of my previous (albeit a bit out of date) experience in market research agencies. It is not as well paid as my previous jobs in agencies but as interesting and much more flexible (even though it is full time)

Overall though I am not sure I would recommend MR agencies. I do enjoy much of the job but Market Research agencies are not fantastic for offering flexible working in my experience. There is more flexibility I think if you work in market research departments/functions of client companies instead.

I would say though that if she is passionate about

Allthebestnamesareused · 13/09/2017 19:27

My cousin did a pharmacy degree and was a Management Consultant at PWC earning £150K going into places such as GSK to advise.

Allthebestnamesareused · 13/09/2017 19:29

If she does STEM subjects as A levels and a STEM degree she can still do a Law Conversion and LPC in 2 years post grad to become a solicitor ( as long as she has AAB/2.1 degree)

kshaw · 13/09/2017 19:31

Biology degree, worked in a lab for a few years at entry level, went travelling, came back at the end of the recession and couldn't get another lab job- did an msc in molecular biology and then worked in the teaching technician labs at various universities (3-2 of which I had to move to London for). Heading back up north next month to a managerial role within a uni on 35k. Been 4 year since graduated from masters

buckyou · 13/09/2017 21:32

Does math count? I'm a business analyst

DH did maths and computer science and he's an IT contractor

CookieDoughKid · 13/09/2017 21:49

Chemistry degree.
Went straight into software and computing. Now Big data.
Tech support
Consulting
Project management
Product development
Business strategist
Commercial Development
Senior Exec at top global company leading multi million £ line of business.
Salary started off as graduate on £21k
Now six figures salary plus bonus, pensions and shares a very generous 50% extra on top.
Never ever worked in Science but Chemistry opened doors!!

CookieDoughKid · 13/09/2017 21:50

18 years work experience and full time single working mum I might add!

MyCatIsASpy · 14/09/2017 13:06

Like Zodlebud I am a chartered accountant, but have moved into a specialist role

SlothMama · 14/09/2017 13:17

I did a biomedical sciences degree, and I currently work in surgical sales it's very medical and I enjoy it, I did think about going into research/teaching but the pay put me off

Ta1kinPeece · 14/09/2017 13:38

At the management consulting firm I did a bit of work for, they always tried to hire people with science / engineering degrees as they have the best analytical skills.

Scary numbers of Accountants have science / Engineering degrees.
Most Actuaries have maths degrees

BagelGoesWalking · 25/09/2017 15:25

Visiting unis for open days, attending the Science/Biomedical talks, it’s been mentioned quite frequently that many graduates go accounting/finance jobs, as the skills they’ve learnt are transferable to other jobs.

Scotsmum2017 · 25/09/2017 15:33

Biology degree, graduated in 1998, now a lab manager

BagelGoesWalking · 25/09/2017 15:33

Someone on another sciency thread said there was a huge lack of ppl with Bioinformatics skills, so it may be something she could look into?

Waddlelikeapenguin · 25/09/2017 15:36

I did chemistry with medicinal chemistry & worked in clinical research - both monitoring sites & managing studies.
Left to SAHP /HE

Zaurak · 25/09/2017 15:43

Multiple degrees including PHD
Postdoc
Changed career to clinical research
Not giving exact figure. 50-100k bracket.

She doesn't need to be in he lab the whole time. If she wants to earn money then a business based approach is the way to go - pharma, clinical research organisation etc. Or of course any of the numerate professions (actuarial, consultancy etc.)

Academia/Wet lab work is only one option. And rarely the best paid.

A science degree is always useful. Keep it as numerate as you can, try to get a year in industry if you can. Network and find out where each path leads.

'Science' is also a broad church. A biology degree may open or close doors that a degree in chemical engineering/biostatistics doesn't. Personally, the harder and more applicable the science the better. I wish I'd not done a biochem/genetics degree - it was fascinating but in retrospect more mathematical / practical chemical stuff would have been more lucrative.

As long as she comes out literate, numerate and with a good grasp of her subject she will be ok. Some stint in industry even better

mousehole · 02/10/2017 23:01

This reply has been withdrawn

withdrawn at poster's request

blueshoes · 02/10/2017 23:52

Bagel, what is bioinformatics?

CookieDough, how does one get into Big Data?