Sunday 11 October 2009

childhood dreams jobs

The article talks about a childhood dreams jobs and how when you grow up this interest changes into a different jobs.
Young artists belong to Walbottle Village primary school, Newcastle draw their professions of their dreams, fulled of imagination and creativity.
The top ten of childhood dreams jobs is head for teacher, doctor and vet, following by footballer, fireman, actor, policeman, dancer and hairdresser.
However, some 69% of 3,000 parents surveyed admitted they had failed to follow their dream career path. This happen partly because can be expensive pay for them.
Expert says that when your job is too far from your ideal isn’t a good sign. For some workers who realize they are nowhere near their dream, knowing what it looks like is the problem. Childhood dreams are not necessarily an indicator of what you will want to do as an adult.
The article point out that it is useful to look back at your life from teenager onwards and consider what you enjoy doing. Evidence exposed in the text suggests the majority of workers shy away from such soul-searching, and decides instead that no dream in particular will do.
But in your job there are three steps you can take: first, figure out what is important and what would make you happy; second, decide if your dream job is really for you, because it might not be, then find out what the role actually involves. Later if you're sure, make the change.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2009/oct/10/when-i-grow-up-childhood-dreams

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