
I’m 3 years post grad and have only had temporary / seasonal jobs. After my last job ended in the fall, my motivation has been at rock bottom. It’s truly so hard finding something in conservation / land mgmt that is permanent and pays a livable wage. I might go into consulting, idk. I feel really betrayed that my college didn’t show me the true reality of the struggles I would face after graduation trying to make it in this field. Best of luck
Im a year post-bachelors and i havent had any luck finding anything career-wise, been working as a janitor for about 6 months. The job markets abysmal for most STEM jobs in general, and with the current admin, environmental science is getting hit especially hard. Doesnt help that the field is already nebulous if you dont have connections already.
I felt this way when I finished my double major so I went right back and got another bachelors (thanks to grants and scholarships I got through my first 2 free and only had to pull minimum loans for my 3rd so I recognize the privilege of suggesting this) and I felt extremely prepared and ready to start my career.
My advice: talk to professors, even if they arent your professors. Ask as many questions as possible, and dont shy away from having to move around. Right now im looking for masters programs abroad to try to anchor myself there. Until the US snaps out of its fugue, i just dont see any future for myself here. Unless you already have 5+ years of professional experience, no one even looks at your applications. Its rough man
thanks for your advice man, i really appreciate it!! I think im in the same boat as you for sure, been thinking about doing my masters abroad in my home country just to be somewhere that has a better envisci future. one professor of mine strongly discouraged going straight from bachelors to grad school, and said he prefers ‘real job and world experience’, but i honestly would rather give myself that extra time to get my foot in the door in another country, and i’ll hopefully have a better chance