RogueAcademic
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Condescending wasn't the intention, it was more because it helped explain where you're coming from.Graney said:Given the condescending tone
Don't be disappointed if he/she doesn't give you an on-the-spot answer to a 'what if' question. They are likely to give you a very broad response encompassing any and all 'equal opportunity' applicants.Graney said:I tried to ring that victorian guy above, to ask what qualifications are necessary to get that job, but forgot it's Sunday lol.
Of course, not all those jobs would be for PhD graduates, for example I've explained that one of the jobs you posted above could possibly be suitable for an honours graduate with experience. But you did ask me for evidence and I gave it plain and simple, that doesn't mean I'm going to analyse 370 job ads from seek.com.au for you.Graney said:Do you really think all ~370 job ads, on seek.com.au alone, among which few would pay much under $70'000, would go mostly to phd qualified individuals? Lets extrapolate this further and assume among all job ads nationwide, and including the pool of unadvertised jobs, there are closer to 1000 vacancies for individuals with environmental science or related background.
I've also explained that some of these jobs are open to graduates from other disciplines too. You might be competing for the same job with, for example, a biological chemistry graduate, or an environmental engineer, or a marine biologist, amongst others.Graney said:How many phd's are they handing out these days? How many dr. environmental science even exist in this country? 1000? 5000? 10'000? Because there are certainly plenty of jobs paying $70'000+
Certainly not with just 'a few years experience' either.Graney said:Yes, of course. You're not going to be offered 100'000 with no work experience, in any field.
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