What I do?
In a nutshell, I work in Social Services. 99% of it has been with adults with developmental disabilities but I've sort of placed myself in a unique and hard to place position after my last few jobs.
Currently I'm working for an Opiates Treatment facility helping them rewrite their standards manual. Not thrilling for anyone but a dork like me. I know what it's like to have a manual that can help staff and a manual that you get on the first day of work and put on a shelf never to be seen again. It's a temp job but my boss has come up with two other projects for me to do- one temp, one permanent but I think I'll be able to do them both.
I LOVE social services, and am an extremely vocal advocate for disability services.
My dream career? I've had it. Sadly I've peaked at 39 at least in terms of the disability industry. Unless I open my own agency (not gonna happen with a toddler underfoot) or turn to lobbying, I'm kind of stuck. That said, this part-time gig has been a great re-entry into the working world after staying at home for the last year+. It's challenging to my brain, I get to work independently, and I still have time to go to the gym.
Social Services requires the following to be happy: 1) accept the fact that even if you're a CEO you will be making tens of thousands of dollars less than your MBA or MHA classmates. 2) Staff are the biggest PITA- not everyone belongs in the social services arena and either you're working with them or managing them.
Specialized training? Depends on what you want to do- management requires a Master's in something. If you're tending to management, KNOW fund-raising. (I don't and it's come back to bite me a few times). Any job that makes a decent salary will require a Master's or a license. A nurse will need a license and at the minimum a BA. My LVNs made 30k because there's a severe nursing shortage- but I was looking for a specific skill set and they had them. Any counseling job will require a license- and they require education. Social work, addictions counseling, 'professional counseling'- each state differs.
I would definitely recommend the social services arena to the physician companion because there are always jobs. The smallest po-dunk town will have a group home that needs staff, the Goodwill will need trainers, the therapy centers/VA's etc. will need counselors. Management positions, especially middle management positions are always available- it's still a female dominated field (except for upper managment- still a bit of a glass ceiling in some areas...like TEXAS) so there are people coming and going from the working world vs. other life areas.
Jenn
In a nutshell, I work in Social Services. 99% of it has been with adults with developmental disabilities but I've sort of placed myself in a unique and hard to place position after my last few jobs.
Currently I'm working for an Opiates Treatment facility helping them rewrite their standards manual. Not thrilling for anyone but a dork like me. I know what it's like to have a manual that can help staff and a manual that you get on the first day of work and put on a shelf never to be seen again. It's a temp job but my boss has come up with two other projects for me to do- one temp, one permanent but I think I'll be able to do them both.
I LOVE social services, and am an extremely vocal advocate for disability services.
My dream career? I've had it. Sadly I've peaked at 39 at least in terms of the disability industry. Unless I open my own agency (not gonna happen with a toddler underfoot) or turn to lobbying, I'm kind of stuck. That said, this part-time gig has been a great re-entry into the working world after staying at home for the last year+. It's challenging to my brain, I get to work independently, and I still have time to go to the gym.
Social Services requires the following to be happy: 1) accept the fact that even if you're a CEO you will be making tens of thousands of dollars less than your MBA or MHA classmates. 2) Staff are the biggest PITA- not everyone belongs in the social services arena and either you're working with them or managing them.
Specialized training? Depends on what you want to do- management requires a Master's in something. If you're tending to management, KNOW fund-raising. (I don't and it's come back to bite me a few times). Any job that makes a decent salary will require a Master's or a license. A nurse will need a license and at the minimum a BA. My LVNs made 30k because there's a severe nursing shortage- but I was looking for a specific skill set and they had them. Any counseling job will require a license- and they require education. Social work, addictions counseling, 'professional counseling'- each state differs.
I would definitely recommend the social services arena to the physician companion because there are always jobs. The smallest po-dunk town will have a group home that needs staff, the Goodwill will need trainers, the therapy centers/VA's etc. will need counselors. Management positions, especially middle management positions are always available- it's still a female dominated field (except for upper managment- still a bit of a glass ceiling in some areas...like TEXAS) so there are people coming and going from the working world vs. other life areas.
Jenn
Comment