austinino12 said:
Hi everyone. I am currently in 11th grade high school and afterwords i want to go to university for astronomy and physics. as of now i don't have a job and i am curious if there is anything that someone my age could do in terms of a career at this age. i am trying to get in contact with someone at the local planetarium but i want know if there are anyother opportunities?
Many young folk work a part time or summer job in retail, or construction (depending on one's location). In high school, I had various part time jobs, e.g., gardening center/nursery and supermarket. Before that, I worked in a bike shop building and repair bicycles.
During university, I tried to get a part time job in the research division of an oil company, but they didn't have openings for someone with that little experience. However, I did get a job as a plumber's assistant (but that was expanded to maintenance of pumps, motors, compressors and HVAC systems), which lead to a part time job during my second year at university. I then got a position in the university food service, with which I got free room and board for the year. From the plumber's job, I met a guy through whom I got a summer job at an oil refinery. That pretty much paid for my third year in university. I also worked a few hours at night as a janitor. I switched majors and changed universities, and during that transition, I got a job as an iron worker, which bascially covered the remainder of my undergrad program, with money left for grad school.
In graduate school, I received research and teaching assistantships, and also found a full time job in the local municipal water department. I worked evening shift, and then graveyard, which enabled me to study because it was a simple operations job monitoring a system that more or less entailed checking gauges about once an hour or two. I actually ended up analyzing trends and developed a more optimal process that reduced the wear and tear on the pumps. I also predicted the failure of one of the pumps (bearing failure) by it's acoustic emissions. Two weeks after I informed the management that the bearing would soon fail, it failed. They were amazed that it could be predicted, but I explained that it was simply a matter of knowing how the equipment sounded in a good state and that the change in noise indicated a bearing problem.