foxfield wrote:
Statistician?
That was another thing I thought of. It's probably feasible if this person can do a Master's in statistics. Apparently, there is some conference attending and networking involved in doing this kind of Master's degree (actually, in any Master's degree, I would think!). I think she can do it if she learns some skills and learns to be less self-conscious and less anxious about how others perceive her, but maybe that's just me, since I go to conferences all the time.
starkid wrote:
Go to
http://www.onetonline.org/Near the bottom of the page is the Advanced Search. You can choose Work Values, click Independence (i.e. not much interacting with supervisors) and see a list of jobs. You can choose the Work Context category, and look at the jobs that
are not in the Interpersonal Relationships subcategory. Basically, just go through the categories, choose the options you want, see the jobs that pop up, and narrow it down.
You can also search for a
particular job you are interested in at the top of the homepage and look at the Work Activities, Abilities, etc. sections to see if it matches your skills and the job duties you prefer not to do.
Thanks, that's a really useful site! Clinical data manager might work but knowledge of programming is listed, which might be a learnable skill. I couldn't find a way to not show any jobs that require a specific skill.
Here's a list of probably the most non-social jobs possible:
http://www.onetonline.org/skills/result ... B.3.m&g=Go
~~~~~~~
This is difficult to figure out... Learning some new skills and improving existing ones, as well as improving self-esteem, would probably be the only way out of this. There is a time constraint because the person at hand is several years older than me and needs to find a way to sustain herself in case something happens to her only parent. I'll refer her to this thread later and if anyone else has any suggestions, please let me know. Thanks for your responses!
_________________
Leading a double life and loving it (but exhausted).
Likely ADHD instead of what I've been diagnosed with before.