By Emily Wengert
Jobs in everything from
videogame design to information
security have hit the big time
with coursework to match
Like many people in their 30s,
Nicole Willick fondly remembers
playing Ms. Pacman while growing
up. With a handful of quarters
from her dad clutched in her
hand, she'd head to the arcade
to beat the latest games. Little
did she realize she was doing
research, in a way, for her
future career as senior producer
for the videogame company
Activision.
Nicole is forging new ground,
both by working in a $28 billion
videogame industry that has only
been around since the early '70s
and as one of the field's first
female employees.
"When I started here in
production, I think I was the
only woman," Nicole says.
But that's starting to change.
Nicole just wrapped up producing
Madagascar, a game based on the
children's film, and, by chance,
four out of five of the people
producing the game were women.
Although there are still more
men in videogame creation,
Nicole sees an increasing number
of women joining the company.
As videogames have taken hold
(annual hardware and software
sales are worth more than what
the movie industry makes in the
box office), video gaming majors
have shown up in schools around
the country - everything from
undergraduate work or a master's
certificate to a PhD.
Sometimes referred to as
digital/interactive media, these
programs teach 3D imaging,
interface design and motion
theory. But if you like to blaze
new trails, videogame design is
only one field that's hot right
now.
Project Management
Project management sounds so
straightforward: a combination
of amazing organizational and
people skills. Think you've got
what it takes?
Make sure you've also got
confidence plus good
negotiating, political, and
networking skills. Then there's
also the uncertainty: a project
can last six months or six years
after which you may have to go
hunting for new work.
"Project managers have to be
hustlers, too. Good salespeople
and negotiators," says Robert
Deemer, assistant professor of
operations at Regis University,
a classroom and online school
based in Colorado. "You have to
beg, borrow, and steal people.
They may be reluctant to become
part of the team."
Though project management has
been around for four decades, it
has exploded in the last 10
years with the growth in
technology and companies pushing
to put out new products, Robert
says.
"Working on space shuttles and
rockets, I've had all kinds of
exciting things in my career,"
adds Robert, who worked for 15
years at Lockheed Martin. "But I
like to live on the edge."
Don't think you've got the
skills yet? There are
certificate programs in project
management that generally focus
on managing resources and team
leadership, while master's
degrees concentrate more in
depth on how companies function.
Crime Scene Investigation
Watch out: Working in crime
scene investigation is so new
that every job available in the
field seems to have different
requirements to work there.
Thinking you want to collect
crime scene samples the way
David Caruso's character does in
CSI: Miami? In many
jurisdictions you have to be a
cop, and sometimes you have to
be trained as a crime scene
technician. But if the science
of the lab entices you (and
courses like chemistry and
quantitative analysis), look for
a bachelor's or master's in
forensic science.
"Even though one can develop a
logical argument as to why
people doing a crime scene
should have a scientific
background, the vast majority of
jurisdictions lack the
requirement," says Peter
DeForest, professor at the John
Jay College of Criminal Justice,
New York City.
As technology has advanced in
areas like finger printing,
blood splatter analysis, crime
scene reconstruction and
ballistics, the demand for this
career has increased
dramatically. Peter expects more
standard rules will one day
apply to this burgeoning area of
work, but until then, it's best
to check your local area for its
hiring guidelines.
Electrical Engineering
Did you know that electrical
engineering is number two of the
top 10 in-demand degrees,
according to the National
Association of Colleges and
Employers? That's why the
engineering schools at the
University of Buffalo and the
State University of New York at
Stony Brook and Binghamton are
creating the world's first fully
online bachelor's degree program
in electrical engineering,
scheduled to launch fall 2006.
"This particular field was
selected because it is one of
the largest engineering
disciplines and because the
program is relatively easier to
convert to an online program,"
explains Charles R. Westgate,
dean of the Thomas J. Watson
School of Engineering and
Applied Science, Binghamton
University, State University of
New York. In fact, electrical
and electronic engineering
technicians make up 42 percent
of all engineering technicians,
with 204,000 people employed who
earn a median salary of $42,950.
In addition, explains Westgate,
there are a substantial number
of potential students who have
successfully completed or can
complete the associate's degree
in engineering, who are seeking
an ABET-accredited bachelor's
degree program that fits their
lifestyles. "They may have
economic, geographical, or
employment constraints," says
Westgate.
An educational program in
electrical engineering will help
spark your career in which
you'll design, develop, test,
and manufacture electrical and
electronic equipment such as
communication equipment, radar,
industrial and medical measuring
or control devices, navigational
equipment, and computers, says
the BLS. Electrical and
electronic engineering
technology also is applied to a
wide variety of systems such as
communication and process
controls. Classes may include
those in electric circuits,
microprocessors, and digital
electronics technology.
As far as job potential, says
Westgate, "data indicates steady
job growth until at least 2012
arising from newly created
positions and positions to
replace those retiring."
Information Security
This intriguing, emerging field
has much more to do than protect
against the damaging situations
portrayed on those identity
theft commercials. Information
security specialists focus on
assuring the correctness,
reliability, availability,
safety, and security for all
aspects of information and
information systems. Among the
areas of expertise within
information security:
cryptography (the coding and
decoding of data and messages);
law investigations, where
professionals deal with computer
crime laws and regulations; rick
response and recovery, focusing
on processes to identify,
measure, and control loss; and
security architecture and
models, whereby professionals
build the infrastructure to
maintain data for a complex
organization.
Not only are the job
responsibilities within
information security exciting
and integral to today's changing
workforce, the demand is
enormous. According to the
International Information
Systems Security Certification
Consortium [(ISC)2], there is an
increasingly vital role and
growing stature of information
security professionals across a
multitude of industries. It
showed that the need for new
professionals would nearly
double worldwide from 2008 to
2.1 million people.
"Businesses recognize that
information and information
security are critical to
delivering their products and
services," says Rolf Moulton,
CISSP-ISSMP, president and CEO
of (ISC)2.
And, according to the Bureau of
Labor Statistics' Occupational
Outlook Handbook 2005, employers
are searching for workers who
are capable of implementing and
maintaining "hot" new
technologies. Many organizations
require professionals hold at
least a bachelor's degree in
information technology; a
master's degree is often
required for a director
position; a Ph.D. for those
aspiring to advanced developer
status. Also imperative are
certifications, both
vendor-specific like or
Microsoft Certified Systems
Engineer: Security (MSCE), as
well as vendor-neutral, such as
Certified Information Systems
Security Professionals (CISSP).
Such certifications, says
Moulton, "empower professionals
throughout their careers."
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