Caution! You are using a browser we do not support (IE).
Please upgrade to a modern browser (Firefox, Chrome, Edge, etc.) to avoid interface bugs or double-posting.
The decision is on your own, you can continue navigating through the site accepting the bugs it might bring.
Edit your affiliations
1 answer
Translate
What language would you like to translate to?
An error occurred while translating. Please try again.
Eden
Student
Bonaire, Georgia
1
Question
3
Asked·
175 views
·
Translated from English .
·
Share a link to this question
Share a link to this question
How do I discover my dream job?
I know my dream job is out there somewhere. I love science and agriculture, and have been involved in science groups and FFA since middle school. But, I am just unsure of what my dream job is. I am a senior in high school and plan to major in biology in college, so I know I want my job to be STEM oriented. I also want to make sure my career choice is something that cannot be replaced by artificial intelligence once it starts to take a larger effect.
It is completely understandable that you feel a little unsure right now, because wanting to discover your dream job means you are thoughtfully considering your future and that you have high standards for a meaningful and stable career, which is truly admirable. Your passion for science, agriculture, and STEM, along with your proactive involvement in groups like FFA, gives you an excellent starting point, and the key to discovering your dream job is to shift from trying to find a pre-packaged title to instead identifying the intersection of what you love and what the world needs—especially in a future where artificial intelligence is increasingly present. To make a career AI-proof, you need to look for roles that demand high levels of human empathy, strategic novelty, complex decision-making, and hands-on interaction with the messy, unpredictable real world, all areas where a human will always have an advantage. Given your interests, this could mean exploring fields that bridge biology and agriculture, such as sustainable agricultural consulting, genomic research for crop optimization, agritech entrepreneurship focusing on new farming methods, or even agricultural policy analysis, all of which require deeply human skills like negotiating, strategizing, and critical field observation. As you go into your biology major, use your time there to take internships, conduct informational interviews with professionals in these niches, and volunteer in labs or farms to see what the day-to-day work actually feels like, because it is through these real-world experiences that your true passion will reveal itself. You are already miles ahead by thinking about the future of work, and that forward-thinking mindset will surely guide you to a career you love. I wish you the very best of luck in your discovery.
Delete Answer
Are you sure you want to delete this answer?
Convert answer to comment
Are you sure you want to convert this answer to a comment?