Many of us likely have a buddy like Chandler fromFriends– one that we love dearly, though we wouldn’t be able to tell exactly what it is they do for work even if our lives depended on it. But sometimes, even when people know what their loved ones’ occupation is, they might not know exactly what it entails.
That’s how myths and legends regarding all sorts ofprofessionsare born. And there sure are plenty of them, such as the belief that nursing is just the first step in becoming a doctor or that a civil engineer will gladly make an architectural plan for your home, just to name a couple examples.
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Just because I’m making your skinny vanilla latte with coconut milk does not mean I’m a f*****g loser or some kind of dumba*s.People go into food and drink establishments daily with the preconceived notion that the employees are somehow inferior beings who deserve to make subpar wages with no health insurance because they should have gone to college, and their job is for teenagers. Newsflash, teenagers don’t open up a restuarant at 5am on a weekday in winter.I’ll have people know that in my lengthy career in food service I have attained not one, not two, but three entire college degrees. Believe it or not, some people choose the profession because it’s the best option for them. Maybe they have children and need the flexibility. Maybe they like free coffee. Maybe they’re a teenager. It doesn’t exactly matter why they’re there, what matters is, that you are no better than them because you spent an entire hour of their wages on an Iced Venti Quad Cinnamon Almond Macchiato.I have worked with DOCTORS at Starbucks. Veterans. Wives of veterans. Single mothers. College professors. A Major League Baseball player. All of us have a legitimate reason to be there, all of us are important, and some of us are even smarter than you.
I’m an airline pilot, and here are some of the most common misconceptions about my job. No, the autopilot doesn’t do everything. Ultimately it’s still just a computer and it’s unable to do something as simple as deviate around a thunderstorm cell right in front of the aircraft. And like all computers they are dependent on human input and they do fail. No, we can’t let you visit the cockpit anymore, even though we may be good friends/related. No, we can’t get you an upgrade to Business/First class. The airline has specific conditions and regulations for doing so. No, we can’t do anything about your complaints regarding in-flight service. Please write in to the customer service department. No, our layovers aren’t one o**y with the cabin crew after another. It’s very common to just get minimum rest and we’re too tired out from the flight to do much else besides have a good meal and a decent night’s sleep. No, we don’t all get massive paychecks. The salary is usually decent but the industry is very volatile and staying profitable is incredibly challenging, hence why bonuses/benefits have dwindled over the years.
People often misunderstand what an editor does. I work as a freelance editor and writer, and I fix challenging manuscripts so the writing is eloquent (as well as comprehensible and compelling).It is not unlike fixing carpentry mistakes, but sometimes I get the impression from people not familiar with my work that they think editing is easy and only involves fixing commas and spelling. (I have been called the “Comma Queen” before.) Yes, that is part of it, but a good editor is a smart generalist and a fast learner who will ask questions of the text and research facts while fixing grammar and poor writing.Just as with carpentry where the angles and materials need to match, the words and thoughts in a document must join together to create a cohesive whole.Good editing is not just turning on spell check and making sure the use of commas is consistent (e.g., using the Oxford comma in a series of items every time in that document). It’s making the document a joy to read and, in the process, not being obvious about the changes I add. It still has to speak with the author’s voice even though I often clean it up. A LOT. —Sarah M. 1/25/2017 EDITED to include Daniele Paolo Scarpazza’s spelling correction (survivor’s).
I am a special education teacher. Let me dispel some misconceptions for you:I am not a saint, and I don’t do my job because it is “so fulfilling”. I like working with little kids and I’m naturally pretty good at explaining and demonstrating concepts. I’m not here to earn a pair of wings.Which leads to: The pay is much better than many people assume, although I wouldn’t complain about a raise. I’m doing this job because it pays money, not because it gives me a warm fuzzy feeling. The term “special education” refers to a huge range of needs among students. When people imagine it, they picture a room full of grown kids in diapers drooling on themselves. That type of student does exist, and I’m happy to say I’ve worked with them, but they are on the extreme end of need. Many students who qualify for special education would seem completely normal to the average person. Some kids just need a little extra help, or a different kind of environment.“Do your students just play and have free time all day?” No, we work, and we work hard. Special education doesn’t exist to coddle kids, it exists to help them be the most independent and capable they can be. Many of my students have difficulty understanding abstract concepts, so I break everything down and show/explain it in as many ways as possible until they get it. Multiplication is hard, but my second graders can do it, because they practiced and practiced and practiced. The regular classroom next door to me sometimes has “game days” where kids play board games all day so the teacher can catch up on grading. We have fun, but game day doesn’t exist in my room. My students might need extra time and assistance, but they are still capable. Most regular teachers will say things like,“Oh, you must have so much paper work and so many reports to write.” Yes, I do, but I only have 10 students, and they have 25. After you factor in grading all those assignments and writing all those report cards and doing all those state assessments, I’ll take my paperwork any day.“You must have so much patience.” No, I don’t, I’m just a normal person who gets frustrated just like anyone else, but I’ve also studied a lot of effective techniques in behavior management and modification. My class is designed to help kids stay focused and to reward them working hard. A lot of regular teachers could save themselves some headaches if they used the methods I use in my class.Working in special education can be hard, but we are not angels doing good deeds out of the kindness of our heart. We are doing a job, and working to help some great kids become as independent and skilled as they can possibly be.
I’m a paramedic. Misconception one. We are glorified first aiders/taxi drivers. The truth is that to be a paramedic now is a full 3 yr BSC degree. The details we have to know about a huge range of things is immense and can be daunting. In Britain we can access several different clinical pathways if necessary. We do not have to take you to hospital (no matter how much you kick and scream) if we can justify it. Number 2. That we run around saving lives. Nope. Most of our work is people who don’t look after themselves/too lazy to do anything other than call us. A huge proportion of our work is this. It can be soul suckingly dull work from going to people who have a bit of a cough to people who are drunk to people who have had a bit of a pain for several days now and it just hurts…… Number 3. That we are well paid and have an amazing pension (I kid you not. I still get a lot of people who think this). Our pay is not good. It isn’t even good when compared to the other services. I could run a fast food outlet and earn a lot more money. Our pensions are horrendous. We have to work until we are 68 (hands up who wants a 68 year old coming to them or performing CPR) to get them and they aren’t worth a huge amount. A lot of people have gone to private pensions instead.
Nurse MisconceptionsOnly Women become nurses . It is true that there are more women than men in nursing, but no one should be surprised that a man is a nurse. (They’re not all gay either.)Nursing is the first step in becoming a Doctor. This is a common misconception. I get asked, “How much longer before you become a Doctor?” The two professions are vastly different and require different education routes altogether. Nurses are not highly skilled professionals.There is no tipping at the end of your visit. Don’t order the nurse around like they work for you. Nurses are college educated professionals. We earn our salaries performing complicated life saving tasks at a high skill level. Treat nurses with the respect the profession deserves.Three day work week is not a full weeks work. Don’t know who started the rumor that three twelve hour days was so much easier than five eight hour days. There is only four hours difference crammed into three days. Most often nurses work over at the end of their shift. Nurses work nights, weekends, and holidays. There is nothing “great” about our schedule.It’s easy to be a nurse. Nursing, though very rewarding, is a hard job. The obvious dirty work of cleaning feces off people is just the tip of the iceberg. Nurses deal with an ungrateful public that views them as Doctor’s peons. Administration expects nurses to do more with less staff and for paltry compensation to boot. Becoming a nurse is difficult enough, remaining one is even tougher.
There are lots, but I’ll just tackle my top 3 here.Astronomy is not ****ing astrology ! Astrology is superstition masquerading as science. Astronomers [internally scream] every time we’re called astrologers, or every time someone brings up zodiac signs as soon as we say what we do.There is no longer any practical distinction between astronomy and astrophysics.Surveying and map-making hasn’t been the primary focus of astronomy for more than a generation now. It’s all applied physics, so I often wonder why some schools keep the “astronomy” around as the name of the major.There are theorists and experimentalists, but at the end of the day, we all sit around solving equations and finagling code trying make sense of our data. And that means if you think the astronomy lab will get you your physical science elective credit without the math, you’re SOL.If you major in astronomy, you will spend far more of your time at a computer than a telescope. Most of your work will be coding, whether it’s simulations, image processing, model-fitting, error analysis, etc. That means if you want to get into big data, but want to avoid the soul-sucking morass of industry, astronomy might be a good fit for you. That or environmental science. Actually, the latter might be of more immediate use, since we’re currently driving a multi-pronged mass-extinction event that Will Make the Planet Too Hot for Humans Much, Much Sooner Than You Imagine , but there’s a lot of morale-crushing politics and denial involved there, too.
Hospital Medical Receptionist: I am not a medical professional and therefore cannot give you a diagnosis over the phone. My work is purely clerical. I can process an admission if you have a referral from your GP, but ultimately I cannot diagnose you based on your stipulated symptoms.I cannot provide complex details relating to your procedure. As each patient is unique, I unfortunately cannot give information regarding fasting instructions, procedure preparations or when to stop taking medication. This information will only come from your specialist’s rooms.I do not have access to a doctor’s private reports. Believe it or not, I cannot pull a doctor’s report “off the shelf.”I cannot personally contact a doctor on his mobile. If you need to contact your specialist, I can give you a number to his/her’s private rooms.I do not spend all day sitting down and answering phone calls. This misconception is fair enough. Prior to becoming a receptionist, I seriously underestimated how much work a receptionist does to keep the whole hospital running smoothly.I do not decided the costs of your procedure. I work at a private hospital, and the procedures can be fairly expensive. I personally have no say in the financial aspect. This is purely between your health fund and your specialist.I am not wealthy. Just because I work at a private hospital, it does not mean I’m driving a Lamborghini to work.
My personal career choice is secretary. It does not mean I’m stupid. I am not lazy. It is not a “stepping stone” job. I don’t sleep with my boss. I love what I do, I make everyone else look good, and I am DAMN good at my job!
A Civil Engineer here. Please don’t ask us to make architectural plan for your home. This is not our job. Architects make these plans civil engineers don’t . Civil engineers make structural plans. In simple terms these plans tell you about the amount of steel and its location to make sure the architectural plan can perform its intended function without failure. Thats how a structural plan looks like.
I’m a Financial Analyst. Not all of us work on Wall Street And we aren’t involved in sinister corporate greed operations. We don’t wear suits, ties and fancy watches to work every day. It isn’t all men . Currently, the majority of my fellow analysts are women. Math Wizardry: Although most FA’s have decent math chops, we don’t sit in front of big screens, conjuring advanced equations to beat the markets. My Advice: Finance is a great career path, particularly if you have solid quant. There’s tons of growth potential. It is the most common background of many types of executives, including CEO’s.
Warehouse work and forklift OPERATOR. The biggest misconception is anyone can do it. Yes, anyone could probably DRIVE a forklift from point A to point B, move a few levers to lift a pallet, and move the pallet across an open floor to set it down. People don’t realize the level of spacial awareness and finesse required to stack product, inside a trailer, on an incline, with less than an inch of space on any given side, and do it all WITHOUT DAMAGING THE PRODUCT. Over the last several years I have discovered that even stacking boxes on a pallet is something that some people just cannot figure out? If all of the boxes are facing in the same direction, and stacked in a group of columns, say twenty columns, stacked five high… they are going to fall over and someone (not me) will be stacking them again. But if you turn one group at one end 90 degrees, and alternate the turned group from one end to the other each layer, they form a brick house pattern that DOESN’T FALL OVER IF YOU LOOK AT IT WRONG… Six team members communicating together to simultaneously lift a very heavy (40,000 pound/20,000kg) piece of equipment off of a flat bed and set it down together requires a major level of trust, especially if you are the one on the smaller price of equipment. Loading or unloading something valued at millions of dollars, and not getting so much as a scratch on it adds a whole New meaning to the phrase “pucker factor..”
I work as a software engineer with an American product-based start-up company. There are several misconceptions that people have regarding a career in IT and while some are understandable, something are absolutely hilarious! There is a common myth that everyone in IT earns handsomely. That’s not entirely true. While a career in IT is rewarding and provides you with a fair enough salary to sustain a family, the packages that you see with people earning 30 LPA, 40 LPA or 80 LPA are only offered to the top engineers. They probably constitute only 1% of all the IT employees, or probably less than that. The majority starts their career between 3–5 LPA only. Not every IT employee that you see is rich. A lesser misconception is that software engineers only code. Their day revolves around coding all the time. The truth is that coding doesn’t even take up 50% of the day; I guess an average software engineer spends more time in meetings than writing a code.
Teaching Or, more broadly, education in America. People talk about the American education system like it exists as a single unit. There is not a monolithic “American education system”. So questions like, “What’s wrong with the American education system” don’t make sense. Most educational decisions in the United States are made at the state and district level. There are 50 states (and four territories and one special district), and over 13,000 school districts. If you want to talk about a problem with a school system, you need to start there, not at the federal level. Generally, this is the power that each level of the education system in the United States has: Federal Department of Education: Helps fund schools in impoverished neighborhoods, handles a lot of college financing for students who need it, and collects data. State Departments of Education: Set standards for teacher licensing in that state, set curriculum standards in that state, help fund schools in impoverished neighborhoods. Note that they set the curriculum standards, not the actual curriculum. Standards are usually pretty broad statements about what students should be learning each year. Most states have adopted Common Core standards for their public schools now. Local School Districts and Individual Schools: Hire teachers, sometimes set the specific curriculum (like which novels to read), but sometimes they let the teachers decide for themselves, provide most of the funding for schools via local property taxes. Anyway, if you want to complain about or praise something about education in America, you need to be more specific. For example: “American students are stupid.” - Too broad. Pulls together very different groups of people who are all in very different organizations. “Students at Highwood High, Illinois District 319, are stupid.” - Much better. We know specifically which education system you think gets bad results.
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Misconception- Doctors prescribe tests to make money yet they cannot make accurate diagnosis. Also, people think private doctors charge too much(in India). This is because There are multiple diseases responsible for same symptoms and he needs to be sure before treating you for some rare disease. He doesn’t want you to SUE him for not prescribing a particular blood test. He couldn’t make accurate diagnosis because it’s really difficult to do so, you couldn’t explain your symptoms well enough or your body didn’t respond to standard treatment. If you think doctors charge too much, go to a government hospital and stand in queues for hours. You don’t just pay for medical treatment, you pay for luxury of getting treatment in time. Stop blaming doctors, if you think they are overcharging, go to someone else.
That I’m a nurse lol. If I wear scrubs in public, I get asked, “Are you a nurse?” I say I work in a hospital and, “Oh so you’re a nurse.” I reply with, “No, I work in a lab” to which the reply is usually, “So you do research.”“No.”Hahaha the clinical laboratory profession is hidden from view from the public so it’s completely understandable that most people neither know it exists, nor what it entails. I love my job though and am happy to talk about it to anyone interested enough to ask :)
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If you publish a book you’ll be rich.Statistically you’re more likely to win the lottery. I am one of the very few authors who makes a living writing novels, and it’s not a good living—I earn less than an average fast food worker.
That all lawyers are heartless, conniving bastards who are screwing people left and right. In reality, lawyers are just regular humans and actually do bad things at a rate far less than the average person: It takes a lot of discipline and obeying the rules to get into law school, finish it, and pass the bar. There are strict ethical rules designed to protect the clients and the public in general from lawyerly misconduct. Lawyers can lose license for egregious violations of these rules. Most states mandate annual “professional responsibility” courses attendance. A significant portion of lawyers are highly idealistic - they went to law to make a difference - defend people who have no voice for example. Look at lawyers in public service - FBI, CIA, ACLU, judges, Presidents (at least good ones!), public defender’s office. Many lawyers work pro bono. These guys were lawyers:
I spent most of my career as a software engineer. Many people think that means I spent my career programming. But that isn’t so. Programming is the entry level for software engineering. By 10 years in I was designing software systems for others to program and before long I was designing systems involving both software and hardware elements and writing proposals and managing teams and teaching others how to manage and many other things that are pretty far removed from programming, but which require one to know how to program (if for no other reason so you can cut through the BS that the programmers sometimes try to get past you). A true software engineer does a whole lot more than programming.
I am a sailor in merchant navy and there are a lot of misconceptions I would like to clear up.6 On and 6 Off:- There is a misconception that sailors have to be onboard for 6 months and then at home for another 6 months which is neither right nor logical. These days, there is a lot of flexibility in merchant navy where a Captain can sail for as low as 3 months giving him the authority to select the month of sailing according to his needs.Pirate Attacks:- Pirate attack are one thing that has gone through a drastic change in the past decade. Now, there are only a few cases where pirates hijack the ships and the navy can’t intercept them. So, the crux is that pirates attacks are quite rare and happen in the area of red zones where ships generally avoid to go through.Seafarers can drink anytime:- My friends often ask me that I would be having all kinds of drinks onboard, however the truth is quite opposite of that. There are strict rules and regulations regarding drinking onboard. As we have the responsibility of million dollar cargo as well as ship that we need to safely transport and drinking the one of those things that will create a hindrance in our duty.There are many other misconceptions like we have can have girlfriends at every port or we can visit any port which is just not true because now there are a lot of rules and regulations imposed on sailors and ports. If you want to know more about merchant navy, lemme know in the comment section and I’ll try to reply you asap.
I’m a translator in English/Spanish (the latter being my mother tongue). I haven’t started working as one yet, but the misconceptions on this profession are quite a few.A machine can do it, such as Google translatorSo you’re an English teacher?I also studied English growing up, I can be a translator tooBut why would you majored in that? Couldn’t you take an English course or something?Why is it so expensive? You literally just have to read it and write it in other languageSo you know what anything means? You know all the words right
As a survival instructor I found that people tended to think that survival was easy once you learnt a few skills, sort of like going camping. They don’t understand just how many skills you need to learn. Also they tend to rely on modern technology, modern technology is NOT renewable/sustainable. We are in a throw away society, things break, malfunction, batteries go flat, gas runs out! The only technology that is sustainable is primitive technology, & the best equipment in my opinion for long term wilderness living/survival is 18th century equipment. You don’y have to purchase antiques, traders that cater to living historians & historical reenactors sell copies of 18th century gear.
That actors are just walking and talking, and since pretty much everyone walks and talks, that pretty much anyone can be an actor. Also, one of the first things people want to talk about is “How do you learn your lines?” That’s like asking a chef “How do you boil water?” Learning lines is the most menial part of an actor’s task, and is in no way a part of the artistry. It is simply the most basic building block.
My job is not so easy that an 18-year-old can learn to do it in a 2-week bootcamp. Data science involves a lot of graduate-level statistical knowledge, and machine learning nuances require a background in real analysis/topology to adequately understand how a given algorithm might perform and what results might be off as a result of limit behavior. This is why data scientist positions in the US require a graduate education to be hired. You wouldn’t want a first year medical student who just learned how to use a scalpel to do your brain surgery. CEOs don’t want shoddy statistics or incorrect inference for decision-making.
When people asks what you do for a living and said “ I’m a civil engineer” They be like:So you wear hard hats and s**t and shout at people to do their work properly? - No, I work in an office.Can you build a house for me? - No, but I can estimate & cost your houseYou must be excellent in math? - Not necessarily, I just know math. I don’t love it. Wow,I bet you’re rich af. - BIG NO. In the Phillipines, as a starter, we roughly have monthly salary of 360$–400$ per month(though salary increases exponentially with experience)Though we’re registered civil engineers, we don’t necessarily wear hard hats or funky reflectorized vests. Some of us are Cost Engineer, Project Planner, Estimator, Designer, Consultant, etc.. Apparently we specialize in one field or another.
People assume accountants are boring…we spend all day buried in our ledgers…banging out numbers on a 10-key.Please! Accounting is the language of business. And we are at the center of it all. I’m involved in every business purchase, divestiture, implementation, reorganization…every big decision involves me in one way or another. I take those strategic ideas from the mahogany desks…and measure the impact for the next move. I’m usually in front of the decisions…answering the what-ifs. I get to be a super hero at least once a month. Just because I get my satisfaction from personal accomplishment rather than external praise…doesn’t make me any less cool.I also provide great jobs for great people. I even get to do something life-changing for somebody on my team…every now and then. It is an incredible gift to be able to do that.In summary: We are not all named Brad, we don’t all wear glasses, and we don’t all quote tax code as if it were the Bible. We are actually the ones keeping it all together for those guys in front. Accounting is where its at!
A little background first: work in a pharma industry, as a Scientist-III. I currently lead 2 major projects- one of the ds I am working on is currently in phase II clinical trial and the other in phase I.Here’s some misconceptions or assumptions people have about the profession I am in:I get paid a lot and have the ability to live a very lavish life.My job is glamorous, in terms of how we describe it and the goals we have.I spend most of my time making presentations. So it mustn’t be that hard.I have work-life balance, and my weekends are chill.I will be at the top of the game once one of the ds gets to the marketing stage.I am always motivated in my job, and absolutely love doing what I do at all times.My work doesn’t involve too much research which I am actually trained for. It’s only set protocols and testing set hypotheses. There’s little to no room for innovation.I have heard all the above, and this is how I react:
I would like to clarify a few misconceptions which some people have about IAS officers: 1. They are arrogant2. They are corrupt and join service to make money3. They demand big dowries4. They are puppets of unscrupulous politicians5. They are insensitive and don’t care for publicI would like to say that majority of them are not arrogant. Do not join service to make money but to serve.
Occupation: Civil-Structural Engineer Common Misconceptions: What most people think I do: 2. What my friends from other branches think I do: 3. What my parents think I do: 4. What Prison Break thinks I do: 5. What Fifth Harmony thinks I do: . What I actually do: Visit site and take necessary notes: 2. Issue/Edit AutoCAD drawings for construction: . That’s all 😁 . Finally a structure is born: .. 🙏🏻
That it’s easy being a jack-of-all-trades. It just gives people another reason to wake you up when the s**t hits the fan.
As I’m a student of Computer Science, Let me clear few common misconceptions about Computer Science in my country.1) Computer Science is not just programming.#Learning C/JAVA/ AUTOCAD/ANIMATION isn’t Computer Science.2) TCS/WIPRO aren’t the only companies where we get jobs/which come for recruitment . :P3) And finally, If you don’t like coding/programming, that’s not the end of your CS Life, There are many Mathematical areas ( Algorithms , TOC ) where you can concentrate on.
I’m an Entrepreneur . People tend to get the wrong idea thinking that all entrepreneurs are successful people when the reality is that 99% of businesses/entrepreneurs fail or stagnate in the journey.The people who are close to you will tend to talk/mock/jeer you when you’re starting out. They try to tell you why what you’re doing will never be successful because so many people have failed, or they have failed. This is normal as most people probably wouldn’t understand the journey you’re on and some are probably jealous with the fact that you’re trying to improve yourself. Most people like being in their comfort zone. For the people who only see the surface, they tend to patronise you a lot, especially in the beginning. “Oh you started a business? Remember me when you’re a millionaire! Let’s see that BMW real soon yeah!” . They’ll tend to bring up the same thing over and over again especially in the early days, which can greatly affect your self esteem and motivation levels.The reality of the occupation is this - It’s incredibly tough, and you’ll have to do it over a sustained period of time. If you don’t love it, you’ll quit . But the benefits will outweigh the costs in the end, so don’t give up.
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