Determining Your Job Skills
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Job listings rarely read, "Wanted: Philosophy majors specializing
in Socrates," or "Calling all English majors for top
jobs at high-profile firm," or "Were you a history major?
Earn six-figures for performing intellectually fulfilling work."
If you are a liberal arts major, targeting potential employers
and marketing yourself may seem a monumental, if not impossible,
task. You should have majored in electrical engineering, right?
Wrong. Sure, your technically-trained friends generally don't
have much trouble determining which employers to target and how
to showcase their tangible skill sets. But, with a savvy approach
to getting a job, you are just as likely as a computer science
major to find meaningful work. And, best of all, your liberal arts
degree generally isn't limiting: You have the freedom to do nearly
anything they want.
The first step is not to think of yourself in terms of your specific
degree. Companies often do not hire students because of their specific
degrees. Instead, they use job applicants' skills as criteria for
filling positions. So, instead of asking, "What are good jobs
for Romance Languages majors?" ask, "What are my passions
and strengths? What skills do I have? What do I want to be doing
in my job?"
The first step in responding to these questions is to honestly
address what you love to do. What fascinates you? What do you find
compelling and fulfilling? Once you've answered these questions,
address what skills you can bring to the work place.
Your first response may be that, after four years of college,
your skills amount to doing close readings of King Lear and analyzing
the socioeconomic implications of the Kennedy administration. However,
according to Phyllis R. Stein, a career coach in the Boston area,
liberal arts majors tend to have a lot of skills they don't even
know they have. "It's not just that you took a Shakespeare
class," Stein says. Instead, she explains, in that Shakespeare
class you honed your researching skills, you learned to make coherent
presentations, and you refined your ability to organize your thoughts
in writing.
Stein adds that liberal arts majors generally have excellent
administrative and management skills. They write well, they can
think critically, they can analyze problems, and they can communicate
well with co-workers. Liberal arts majors can work simultaneously
with big picture concepts, and with the small details that fit
into these large visions. They are also, she says, adept at adapting
to the vocabulary of different occupational fields.
For example, the jargon of marketing, law, and accounting is such
that different words in each field often have similar definitions.
Liberal arts majors are good at achieving fluency in many different
occupational languages, simply by virtue of spending their undergraduate
careers using terminology specific to English, philosophy, and
history. This versatility is helpful to liberal arts majors as
they tailor their resumes and job applications to prospective employers.
Also, when you assess your skills, don't forget the skills you
gained from doing volunteer and extracurricular work.
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