ACT's World-of-Work Map Career Areas: Community Services Worker; Lawyer; Paralegal; Home Economist; Career Counselor; clergy. Photo of Xavier Flores Xavier Flores is a social worker who looks after the http://www.act.org/wwm/wow/career_y.html
Extractions: Individual/Family Development Studies (2), Criminal Justice and Corrections (2 or 4), Social Work (2 or 4), Psychology (4), Sociology (4), Theology (4). While it's important to know what kind of career you're interested in, it's also important to consider the skill level needed. Community Services Profile
NMSU Career Center social work is the study of the processes that assist those in our society who are unable to clergy Rehabilitation specialist Geriatric care specialist http://www.nmsu.edu/~counsel/social_work.html
Extractions: Archives Social Justice Staff Coordinators, Clergy Help Justice Work Thrive Social justice work in our congregations has always depended on volunteers. And always will. But more and more, congregations are finding ways to support their volunteers with social justice professionals. Some larger congregations are hiring social justice coordinators. Others call ministers with a passion for social issues. Kate Lore is director of social justice at First Unitarian Church , Portland, OR. She works more than three-fourths time and the 800-plus-member congregation pays her about $38,000. "This job is a joy and a tremendous challenge," Lore says. "The joy is leading people to feel their power and to connect what they do in the world with their spiritual beliefs."
UCLA School Of Public Affairs The pupose of the event was to reconnect the social work profession with labor insuring that future clergy members will be sensitive to, interested in, http://www.spa.ucla.edu/main2.cfm?d=xr&f=news.cfm&s=school&news_id=75
Military Spouse Career Center social workers generally have a master s degree in clinical social work. Certified pastoral counselors are members of the clergy who have specialized http://www.military.com/spouse/fs/0,,fs_counsel_choose,00.html
Extractions: There are times when personal, work, or family problems make it hard to enjoy life. You may be feeling overwhelmed by everyday demands or finding it hard to feel pleasure in life. Maybe you're having trouble sleeping or concentrating at work. Perhaps you and your spouse are arguing more, or your child is eating poorly or seems "down." Whether your concerns are recent or long-term, sometimes problems are too difficult to handle alone. There are many different reasons that you or a family member may seek professional counseling. The words counseling, therapy, and psychotherapy are often used to describe the same process. Whatever term you use, counseling is a process that usually involves a series of discussions with a trained professional who can help you identify your feelings or problems, talk about them, and find ways to cope with or solve them. During the counseling process, you may discover patterns of thinking and behaving you want to keep or change. You are really buying the time and expertise of a specialist who can help you understand more about who you are and how you can make changes in yourself or your life. Counseling and therapy can occur individually, with another person, with a family, in a group, or in a combination of these. Therapists working with couples often see the individuals separately as well as together; and, when working with families, they may see individuals, the parents, other combinations of family members, or the whole family together.
SocworkDEFN For further detailed information on clergy as a career, please follow the He applied and was offered a job as a community center social worker with a http://sociology.department.tcnj.edu/Careerpage/Careers/CLER.HTM
Extractions: Religious beliefsbe they Buddhist, Christian, Jewish, Moslem, or based on some other religionare significant influences in the lives of millions of Americans, and prompt many believers to participate in organizations that reinforce their faith. Even within a single religion many sects may exist, with each group having unique traditions and responsibilities for its clergy. For example, Christianity has over 70 denominations, while Judaism has 4 major branches, as well as groups within each branch, with diverse customs. Clergy are religious and spiritual leaders, and teachers and interpreters of their traditions and faith. They organize and lead regular religious services and officiate at special ceremonies, including confirmations, weddings, and funerals. They may lead worshipers in prayer, administer sacraments, deliver sermons and read from sacred texts such as the Bible, Talmud, or Koran. When not conducting worship services, clergy organize, supervise, and lead religious education programs for their congregations. Clergy often visit the sick or bereaved to provide comfort, and counsel persons who are seeking religious or moral guidance, or who are troubled by family or personal problems. They also may work to expand the membership of their congregations and solicit donations to support its activities and facilities. Clergy serving large congregations often share their duties with associates or have more junior members of the clergy to assist them. They often spend considerable time on administrative duties. They oversee the management of buildings, order supplies, contract for services and repairs when necessary, and supervise the work of paid staff and volunteers. Clergy also work with committees and officials, elected by the congregation, who guide the management of the congregation's finances and real estate.
Extractions: Individuals searching for Career Information for a Degree in Theological, Religious, and Ministerial Studies found the following related articles, links, and information useful. September 19, 2005 Zip Code: Radius: 100 Miles 90 Miles 80 Miles 70 Miles 60 Miles 50 Miles 40 Miles 30 Miles 20 Miles 10 Miles Agriculture Programs Architecture Programs Basic Skills Programs Biological and Biomedical Sciences Programs ... Social Services and Public Admin. Programs
Connecting MBTI Personality Types With Careers And Jobs Chart social worker personnel counselor alcohol/drug counselor. INFJ career counselor ombudsman clergy journalist newscaster career counselor housing director http://www.learningchoices.com/career-personality.htm
Extractions: People who prefer Perceiving tend to like a flexible and spontaneous approach to life and prefer to keep their options open. The US Department of the Interior provided this chart that shows, based on the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) categories, what types of careers that may be enjoyable for those within a particular MBTI category.
Extractions: The Behavioral and Social Science Programs at the University of Maine at Fort Kent take an integrated and multi-disciplinary approach to the exploration of humanity. Our degree programs include a Bachelor of Science in Behavioral Science and a Bachelor of Arts in Social Science. In our four-year program we also offer a minor in Behavioral Science and a minor in Criminal Justice (coming in 2004), as well as a minor in Social Science. This particular minor is limited to Elementary Education majors only. We also offer an Associate of Arts in Human Services and an Associate of Science in Criminal Justice. What are the Behavioral Sciences? Our most narrowly focused discipline, Psychology, studies the human mind, thought and cognition; the development of the self through the life span; and the relation of the individual to the group. Sociology continues the discussion, with its focus on group behaviors and social institutions. Anthropology takes the widest possible focus, incorporating the entire scope of humanity through time and across the world. What are the Social Sciences?
Exploring Career Pathways - Family And Human Services Pathway ACT World of work Map; Holland Codes social, Enterprising. careers in this pathway fall into these subgroups. social Services; Personal/Customer http://www.aea10.k12.ia.us/curr/stw/pathways/fam.html
Extractions: Are you ... Then you share some characteristics of people employed in Family and Human Services. Subgroups correlate most closely with Careers in this pathway fall into these subgroups: Careers that require On-the-Job Training and/or Specialized Training Careers that require Experience and/or Community College Training Careers that require Experience, Community College, or University Training
Social And Recreation Services Career Cluster social service workers usually need some college work in human services or Occupations in Indiana s social and Recreation Services Career Cluster http://www.learnmoreindiana.org/careers/clusters/leg.xml
Extractions: toll-free at 1-800-992-2076 The Learn More Web site is underwritten by a grant from the Indiana Department of Workforce Development and is part of America's Career Resource Network (ACRN). Learn More operates under the direction of the Indiana Commission for Higher Education Learn More Resource Center
NDCRN | Career Search Career planning and life planning are basically the same when doing career clergy work in religious, educational, medical, and social agencies. http://www.ndcrn.com/careerinfo/occupation.aspx?occupationid=7120
University College Of Tulane Learn about your Holland groups and careers that match social people like to work with people. They like to inform, enlighten, help, train, http://www.tulane.edu/~uc/resources/holland.htm
Extractions: in Virginia, traveled to northern New Jersey to consult at the Bon Secours hospitals in Hoboken and Jersey City. She wasn't there to help take care of the hospitals' patients, but rather their staff members. In Hoboken, where the hospital had once had a view of the World Trade Center, hallways were lined with fliers posted by people searching for their lost loved ones. "Walking down the hallway, seeing them, was overwhelming," she recalls. The impact of seeing every day the faces of scores of people they couldn't help hit the hospital staff hard. As part of her work, Ms. Dillon says, she encouraged the employees to talk openly about their feelings. She and the workers came up with a plan: One month after New York City began issuing death certificates for the missing, they would take down the fliers, but post them in the hospital chapel as a way to honor the people who had died and give closure to the people who had hoped to help them. What Ms. Dillon sought to prevent is known as "compassion fatigue." Although the phrase is thrown around casually in the news media, it also has a specific meaning that is recognized by mental-health professionals.
A&S Careers, Philosophy Career options for graduates can be found in such areas as public policy, social work Law Teaching Technical Writing, Political Science Communication http://www3.uakron.edu/ascareer/Philosophy.html
Extractions: "What can I do with a degree in Philosophy?" The answer to this question would be, Anything that any Liberal Arts major can do, and maybe more! Because Philosophy tends to attract better-than-average students, B.A. graduates are found in government, business and service professions, and in graduate and professional studies such as law, medicine, and the ministry, as well as academic disciplines such as Philosophy, English, Anthropology, Psychology. The choice of career course is limited only by the individuals personal design. Philosophy majors are trained to think hard, to think both creatively and critically about their understanding of things, as well as about the perceptions of others. They are trained to listen carefully, to ingest information, to analyze information, to assess information for pertinent solutions, and to communicate their responses clearly, concisely, and honestly. This specific training, coupled with the broader academics of a solid Liberal Arts curriculum, contributes to great academic success according to results from such tests as the GRE (Graduate Record Examination), LSAT (Law School Admissions Test), and GMAT (General Management Admissions Test). Transferrable skills such as the ability to objectively analyze, efficiently organize, competently communicate (both orally and in writing), and thoroughly research contribute positively to a Philosophy majors marketability in law, teaching, diplomacy, public service, publishing, journalism, the ministry, the social or natural sciences, mathematics, business, or the arts.
Career Services Opportunities in social work careers by Renee Wittenberg, 1988. (same address as above). Sociology A World of Opportunities What can I do with a BA in http://www.creighton.edu/careercenter/careerexploration/majors/sociology.html
Extractions: Family Housing and Advisory Services Administrative Assistant Administrator (salary, wage, social welfare) Admissions Counselor Adoption Agent Advertising Manager Advocate Aging Specialist Alcohol and Drug Case Worker Anthropologist Banker Biographer Budget Analyst Business Manager Career Services Counselor Case Aid Worker/ Caseworker Child Welfare Officer City Planner Civil Engineer Clergy Community Organizer Community Planner Community Relations Director Community Service Agency Director Compensation/Benefits Worker
Career Services University of Nebraska at Omaha, Masters of social work Career Planning Professional; Child Psychologist; clergy Member; Clinical Psychologist http://www.creighton.edu/careercenter/careerexploration/majors/psychology.html
DePauw U: Career Services Center The Princeton Review CounselorO-Matic social worker National Association of social workers The New social worker Online careers in social work http://www.depauw.edu/admin/career/soc.asp
Extractions: For a list of related web sites click here. Sociology asks questions about what it means to be human and what it means to live in society. A major in Sociology provides: Sociology majors have gone on to successful careers in law counseling, corrections, government, social work, policy analysis, journalism, business, teaching, community organizing, museum work and many other professions. Many occupations today require a college educated individual who can write and speak well, solve problems, learn new information quickly and work well with others on a team. This means that college graduates use their education in a wide variety of fields, and your future career may relate more to your personal career interests, work values and transferable skills than any specific academic major. However, the following list contains a representative sample of current job titles of Sociology majors. Use this as an idea list, and remember that it represents some, but certainly not all, of the careers you might consider. Students obtaining employment immediately upon graduation are usually those with the best college records and a willingness to relocate to find a job. Some of these jobs also require education beyond a bachelors degree.
Card Catalog Subjects, Career Library Americorps; Art Therapy; Child Care; clergy; Counselor/Career Psychiatrist; Psychologist; Public Interest careers; Religious careers; social Worker http://www.utexas.edu/student/careercenter/services/info/keyword.html
Extractions: The following is a list of keywords by which you may search for resources in the Career Center's library. These words may be entered into the library's computerized card catalog. These resources are not available online; however, this list gives you an idea of what our library has to offer you. The keyword list contains these sections: Specific Careers ARTS BUSINESS Accounting Actuary Agribusiness Appraiser Auctioneer Auditor Banking Broker Budget Analyst Business Careers Buyer Catering Construction Careers Consulting Consumer Services Contract Management Credit Manger Economist Employee Relations Entrepreneur Finance Financial Analyst Financial Planner Fund Raiser