career Guide

Career Research Section


 

Career Research Navigation


|

Careers Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Career Point |
Career Fair Details |
Free Career Aptitude Test |
Career In Accounting |
Walmart Career |
Career Of A Traffic Accident Investigation |
Career Job |
Pa Career Links |
Spherion Career |
Home Depot Career |

List of career Articles


Career Research Best seller

Buy it Now!



Best Career Research products

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on career
Email:
First Name:



Main Career Research sponsors

 

Latest Career Research link added

...

Submit your link on Career Research!



 

Welcome to career Guide

 

Career Research Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

The Job versus Career Debate

from:

Many wonder what the difference is between a job and a career. Some would say that they are basically the same thing; after all, they are both venues in which a person generates an income. However, while a job is something an individual does to earn money it rarely involves any type of planning. One can apply for a job at a burger joint but few would consider that to truly be a career. When it comes to a career, there is typically an amount of groundwork or education. It more or less expresses the true skills of an individual; whereas a job tends to be a one size fits all income producer.

To prepare for a career, one will generally need to obtain a degree or special certification. This can be accomplished by attending a college or vocational school. Depending on the line of work, one may prepare for a year or seven years getting the right training. Those who opt for a certain vocation often tend to have firm goals in life they wish to make a reality. They may have a certain type of life or lifestyle they wish to lead that a simple job cannot provide. They can also have very strong abilities and talents that are unique and cannot be utilized anywhere other than in a specific career.

Once an individual launches into his or her career, they can be required to devote a certain amount of time honing their skills to solidify their profession. They may attend courses or seminars to further enhance their expertise or knowledge. Some professions require learning new systems or procedures from time to time. This can increase not only skill level but prestige and even earning power. While a job can provide the occasional training and raise, there may or may not be room for advancement. Even if there is, jobs rarely concern themselves with whether or not the individual's best skills are being utilized.

While it is easy to achieve the goal of bringing in an income, those who have a career accomplish this by doing what suits them best. It is no secret that when individual skills are recognized and put to use, people tend to love their occupation much more. They are more likely to refer to it as their livelihood and identify who they are with what they do. Those with jobs tend to become less satisfied over time because their true gifts and abilities are not being utilized. These are the individuals who end up chucking their jobs in order to go out and train for a career.




Other Career Research related Articles

Career Finder
Career Personality Quiz
Career Personality Test
Career Cruising
Education Career

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Career Research News

Laboratory scientists win 4 Office of Science Early Career Research Program awards - EurekAlert (press release)


Laboratory scientists win 4 Office of Science Early Career Research Program awards
EurekAlert (press release)
Four Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory scientists have earned $10 million in funding through the Department of Energy Office of Science Early Career Research Program (ECRP). "Early career" is defined as principal investigators (PIs) who are within ...

Read more...


PNNL scientist receives Early Career Research Award - R & D Magazine


R & D Magazine

PNNL scientist receives Early Career Research Award
R & D Magazine
A bioinformaticist from the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory will receive an Early Career Research Award from DOE to advance his research identifying proteins that could be used in biofuel production.
Young PNNL scientist in Richand earns $2.5M grantMid Columbia Tri City Herald

all 4 news articles »

Read more...


20-somethings go home to regroup - The Seattle Times


20-somethings go home to regroup
The Seattle Times
The share of Americans living in multigenerational households is the highest it's been since the 1950s, the Pew Research Center found. The trend is being driven by "boomerang kids," so named because they moved out, then moved back in.

and more »

Read more...


Students encouraged to plot careers early - Rochester Democrat and Chronicle


Students encouraged to plot careers early
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
Those supporters say career-focused skills better engage students because they clearly see how what they are learning in the classroom will benefit them in the future. A national study by the Gates Foundation, which conducts education research and ...

and more »

Read more...


Job Gains by Demographic - Human Resource Executive Online


Job Gains by Demographic
Human Resource Executive Online
According the Labor Department's March 2012 figures, those older workers gained 2.8 million jobs since March 2010, compared to a net job loss of 258000 for workers between the ages of 45 and 54 during that same time period. Such figures should not come ...

Read more...


New grads find accounting beats psychology - Chicago Daily Herald


New grads find accounting beats psychology
Chicago Daily Herald
... isn't benefiting all majors the same way, as in pre-recession years, said Edwin Koc, who heads research at Bethlehem, Penn.-based NACE. “It's a much more split market,” Koc said, noting the pattern mirrors a 2011 survey of students' job offers.

Read more...