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Please help me about the choice of courses with good employment offers in the U.S?


I am planning to pursue a masters degree in the U.S. I am from an engineering background(doing my bachelors in electronics engineering) but I am more interested in pursuing masters in any field other than engineering. I am planning to take my G.R.E general exam.Can any one tell me the list of courses(like with arts flavor and even financial flavor) with good employment opportunities after I did my masters?

The Best Jobs for Six Personality Types:

If you are practical, straightforward, realistic and hands-on: Electrician, biomedical engineer, orthodontist or surgical technologist.

If you are investigative, analytical, intellectual and scientific: Professor, software developer, librarian, physician's assistant or veterinarian.

If you are artistic, creative, and imaginative: Landscape architect, graphic designer, director or producer, interior designer, editor.

If you are a social person, a team player who enjoys helping others: School psychologist, mediator, nurse, physical therapist, social worker.

If you are an enterprising person, competitive, energetic, and extroverted: Executive, financial manager, sales rep, sales manager.

If you are an orderly, conventional person, careful and efficient: Accountant, actuary, financial planner, technical writer, building inspector.

Here are the 25 BEST Careers for 2007 (according to US News magazine):

Actuary, Architect, Audiologist, Clergy, Dentist, Editor, Engineer, Fundraiser, Higher Education Administrator, Landscape Architect, Librarian, Management Consultant, Medical Scientist, Occupational Therapist, Optometrist, Pharmacist, Physician, Physician Assistant, Politician, Professor, Registered Nurse, School Psychologist, Speech/Language Pathologist, Systems Analyst, Urban/Regional Planner.

They also report that the 10 most OVERRATED careers are:

Ad Executive, Attorney, Chef, Chiropracter, Nonprofit Manager, Police Officer, Psychologist, Real Estate Agent, Small Business Owner, Teacher.

Hope that helps! Best wishes to you!

There's still time to study for the GMAT and then go to business school. Or you can fulfill the pre-law requirements and go to law school. Both of those earn very good salaries. As for the arts, you could get a masters in any of the humanities or social sciences like history, english, sociology, anthropology. Then you can get a PhD and become a professor or some other academic position.

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