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Auteurs principaux: Jambeck, Karen, Reynolds, Richard
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Langue:en
Publié: 1977
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED147857
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author Jambeck, Karen
Reynolds, Richard
author_facet Jambeck, Karen
Reynolds, Richard
Jambeck, Karen
Reynolds, Richard
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents English Majors: A Career Survey of Graduates, 1968-1976. Jambeck, Karen Reynolds, Richard Career Opportunities College Graduates Employment Patterns Employment Potential Employment Qualifications English Graduate Surveys Job Skills Labor Market Majors (Students) Vocational Followup This booklet provides data from a survey of more than 400 graduates in English from the University of Connecticut, showing what those graduates are doing, what value they now place on an English major, and what advice they might give undergraduates now majoring in English. Responses to the survey are listed within these categories: administration, business, graduate study, labor, law and medicine, library work, miscellaneous professional, self-employed, social work and counseling, teaching, writing and publishing, and unemployed. The observations most often made by the graduates were these: The ability to communicate is essential in most jobs. Classes that encourage analytical thinking and writing develop important skills. Studying literature enables readers to understand human behavior, thereby assisting in job performance. Many English majors should take one or more business or technical courses. English skills are more likely to help on the job than to help in getting a job. Two appendixes list graduate programs and business positions for English majors. (RL)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED147857
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1977
record_format eric
spellingShingle English Majors: A Career Survey of Graduates, 1968-1976.
Jambeck, Karen
Reynolds, Richard
Career Opportunities
College Graduates
Employment Patterns
Employment Potential
Employment Qualifications
English
Graduate Surveys
Job Skills
Labor Market
Majors (Students)
Vocational Followup
English Majors: A Career Survey of Graduates, 1968-1976. Jambeck, Karen Reynolds, Richard Career Opportunities College Graduates Employment Patterns Employment Potential Employment Qualifications English Graduate Surveys Job Skills Labor Market Majors (Students) Vocational Followup This booklet provides data from a survey of more than 400 graduates in English from the University of Connecticut, showing what those graduates are doing, what value they now place on an English major, and what advice they might give undergraduates now majoring in English. Responses to the survey are listed within these categories: administration, business, graduate study, labor, law and medicine, library work, miscellaneous professional, self-employed, social work and counseling, teaching, writing and publishing, and unemployed. The observations most often made by the graduates were these: The ability to communicate is essential in most jobs. Classes that encourage analytical thinking and writing develop important skills. Studying literature enables readers to understand human behavior, thereby assisting in job performance. Many English majors should take one or more business or technical courses. English skills are more likely to help on the job than to help in getting a job. Two appendixes list graduate programs and business positions for English majors. (RL)
title English Majors: A Career Survey of Graduates, 1968-1976.
topic Career Opportunities
College Graduates
Employment Patterns
Employment Potential
Employment Qualifications
English
Graduate Surveys
Job Skills
Labor Market
Majors (Students)
Vocational Followup
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED147857