How the Best Careers 2009 Were Selected

December 11, 2008 RSS Feed Print

A career is too nuanced to be judged purely on statistics, so we use both quantitative and qualitative criteria to select U.S. News's Best Careers. From the hundreds of careers and variants in the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Occupational Outlook Handbook, plus other candidate careers, we selected the 31 that offered outstanding opportunities based on:

Job satisfaction, defined as spending a high percentage of time on activities that many people would consider rewarding and/or pleasant.

Training difficulty, defined by the length of training typically required, adjusted by the amount of science and/or math involved.

Prestige, based on an informal survey of college-educated adults.

Job market outlook, based on data from the U.S. Department of Labor and professional organizations. Because even its current data can be a year or two old, we adjust that in light of recent major trends. For example, this year, a career's job market rating was increased if it is in one of the new president's priority areas: healthcare, energy, the environment, education, infrastructure, or re-regulation.

Pay, with data provided by payscale.com, which has an extensive database of individual employee compensation profiles. Pay assumes an average scope of responsibility and that you're employed by someone else. Self-employed individuals and those with above-average scopes of responsibility can earn significantly more.

Tags:
Bureau of Labor Statistics,
careers

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Don't waste your time reading this crap. I would like to know what research if any went into this article. Regarding the architect comments above, I am an architect as well and I do not know a single one who is still employed. You will spend your first 10 years drafting for the company for very little pay.. then they will lay you off or get rid of you because they feel you are too expensive and will replace you with a fresh student. The cycle continues... Do something you enjoy.. nothing else matters.

Architect of HI 12:37AM September 02, 2009

Is this what passes for professional research these days? This is worse than your run-of-the-mill hackjob journalism. It's more like a smoldering mountain of horse turd wrapped in off-white polyester lace from the Martha Stewart Collection at Kmart. They listed Hair Stylist/Cosmetologist alongside Veterinarian. Have you ever heard a hair stylist brag about his/her terrific health insurance and retirement benefits? No, because the overwhelming majority of them don't have any! Veterinarians require as much education and training as regular doctors, and the cost of that education and training is equally staggering. Nobody rolls out of bed one day and decides to be a veterinarian. If U.S. News really wants to give people useful advice, it should start by hiring writers who perform research that goes beyond Googling over a Starbucks vente frappucino.

Ty of MD 1:29PM August 02, 2009

I whole heartedly agree with the last comment. I felt compelled to write this purely to warn anyone who may follow this article's advice and go back to school for landscape architecture. I am a recently laid-off landscape architect, and cannot believe the change in job postings from when I started in Southern California three years ago to now. There are no available jobs in this field. So now the question must be asked - do I retrain for one of your other mentioned careers?

CSW of CA 9:25PM July 09, 2009

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