ASIAN AMERICAN
CAREER SUCCESS CENTER
Career Choices of Elite Asian American Grads
     Recent heavy demand for video games have created a lucrative niche: videogame programmers with under two years experience earn an average annual salary of $59,400, according to a 2003 survey from San Francisco-based Game Developer magazine.
Law
     Brainy young Asian Americans who are allergic to test tubes and calculators are discovering law to be an attractive default profession. Not only does it offer the opportunity to enjoy status and potentially major-league earnings, it offers the added advantage of defying expectations of those with stereotypical notions of suitable careers for Asian Americans.Media and Advertising
     Asian Americans who pride themselves on an exceptional grasp of American culture and strong creative abilities sometimes forsake traditional professions to take their chances in the mass media and affiliated industries like advertising and publishing. The firms in these fields see themselves as embodying a cultural elite, especially because they attract elite applicants drawn to the perceived glamour and opportunities for creative expression. Degrees from elite colleges can help land interviews though not necessarily secure job offers.Biotech/Pharmaceuticals
     Those entering this nascent field hope to participate in the next big technological revolution, just as those who worked in Silicon Valley in the 70s and 80s became pioneers in the digital revolution. The field attracts elite grads who have shown exceptional research skills in areas like molecular and cell biology and plan to earn advanced degrees. Unlike in engineering, there is a pronounced jump in earnings and advancement potential with each added degree.Mathematicians/Physicists
     Those who take more pleasure in using their brains to solve difficult problems than to make money or jockey for power, are drawn to careers in mathematics or physics. These are fields for the truly elite braniacs. The entire U.S. has fewer than 3,000 professional mathematicians outside of academia though there are ten times that number on university faculties. A mathematician's job is to use various mathematical techniques to solve practical problems that baffle ordinary mortals — like coming up with optimal signal-light sequencing in a traffic grid for various times of the day or optimizing the flight schedules of an international airline or coming up with encryption schemes that will baffle determined crackers, for example. Physicists wrestle with similar mind-benders to improve ways to isolate characteristics of matter and energy at the subatomic level.| “The field attracts elite grads who have shown exceptional research skills in areas like molecular and cell biology and plan to earn advanced degrees.” |