- Acquisitions Editor
- Advertising Copywriter
- Advertising & Promotions Manager
- Antique Dealer
- Archivist
- Arts Administrator
- Bank Customer Services Rep
- Biographer
- Border Services Officer
- Career Development Professional
- Chief Administrative Officer
- Child and Youth Worker
- Civil Litigator
- Community Outreach Worker
- Communications Specialist
- Conservator
- Consumer Credit Manager
- Crime Prevention Coordinator
- Cultural Tour Guide
- Curator
- Customs Broker
- Demographer
- Diversity Officer
- Director of a Community Centre
- Documentarian
- Event Planner
- Exhibit Designer
- Financial Researcher
- Foreign Service Officer
- Fundraiser
- Heritage Interpreter
- Historian
- Historical Projects Coordinator
- Immigration Officer
- Investment Advisor
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- Judicial Clerk
- Lawyer
- Legal Assistant
- Librarian
- Lobbyist
- Management Consultant
- Manager of Customer Relations
- Manager of Volunteer Resources
- Market Research Analyst
- Museum Technician
- Operations Manager
- Paralegal
- Police/Detective
- Political Aide
- Post-Secondary Education Administrator
- Project Manager
- Promotions Manager
- Public Policy Analyst
- Public Relations Specialist
- Publishing Sales Representative
- Radio/TV Research Assistant
- Real Estate Agent
- Records Management Technician
- Reporter
- Social Media Specialist
- Social Policy Researcher
- Sports Writer
- Student Life / Residence Coordinator
- Teacher / Professor
- Technical Writer
- Title Searcher
- Tourism Consultant
- Training Specialist
- Underwriter
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Myth: Medical schools will think I am more serious if I major in the sciences.
Last year, exactly half of the Princeton students admitted to medical school were Humanities/Social Science majors. Acceptance rates for medical school are the same for science and non-science majors. Among the Humanities students admitted to medical school last year were majors in Art/Archaeology, Art History, Comparative Literature, Religion, Sociology, Psychology, English, History, and WWS. Students sometimes think that they will be more successful in medical studies if their science background is deep, but Humanities students thrive once they get to medical school.