SmashMonkey
Registered
hey! so I've recently decided I want to go to school and get into dive medicine/decompression theory research. I've talked to someone who's actually a member of the DAN research team, who said I'd be able to get a job in the field, so that's all well and good. now, though, I'm having trouble deciding on a major. I'm thinking biology with either a biochemistry, cellular/molecular biology or biotechnology concentration. I really don't know where to decide lol. what do you think? or should I choose something different altogether? thanks
Congratulations on taking the first step to the rest of your life! I would recommend instead of pre-determining the end goal, which could change as you gain experience and wisdom, take a look in the mirror and ask yourself:
What are your skills?
What do you excel in compared to others?
What useful types of activities bring you joy so that you can spend hours upon hours practicing it and honing it so that you become better at it than anybody else?
Not just "following your passion"
Developing your core skillset as you explore possible areas of interest, such as dive medicine/deco theory research keeps your options open. Are you energized by crunching numbers, data analysis, looking for patterns, coding, theoretical math, etc.? Or do you enjoy observing nature, working in the field, describing and explaining phenomenon, writing and reading, etc.. Chemistry, physics, biology, mathematics, engineering, data science, computer science, statistics, writing, etc.? Big picture vs. minute details. Abstract vs. concrete? Extroverted vs. introverted? Getting your hands "wet" in the field/patients/lab vs. pushing paper and data sets. Many project teams in different industries are multidisciplinary. No one person is an expert in everything. They have PhDs, physicians, statisticians, writers, engineers, project managers, interns, MBAs, lawyers, accountants, finance, etc.. The trick is to develop your skillset and expertise so that somebody will pay you $$$ to add value to a particular project - it could be dive medicine/deco theory or anything else.
I like this summary
Think like a scientist. Talking to people currently working in dive medicine/deco theory research is fantastic. But it's not the full picture. There's survivorship bias and sampling bias. For example you may connect with many MDs, but that may or may not be the best or most efficient entry into the field. Also, some of the jobs in the field 10 years from now, about the time you finish grad school, might not even exist right now.
Good luck.