Careers in Rock!

When you venture down a lava hole formed by a Viking worm what do you expect to find?

Careers in Rock!

For Christmas we went to Iceland (a year late; last year I just stood outside the supermarket) and had the immense luck to not only get there, despite Covid, but discover caving in one of the longest known lava tunnels in the world, Víðgelmir lava cave.

Just shy of 1600 metres long and around 150,000 cubic metres (m³), Víðgelmir is one of the biggest caves in Iceland and one of the largest lava caves in the world. It is located in Hallmundarhraun lava field in Iceland’s highlands. The cave is 1100 years old, and the Vikings thought it was made by a giant worm escaping from the Volcano and eating through the earth.

However, the accompanying highlight for me were the telltale British accents of our guides, so I had to interview them about how two British students had ended up working in a lava cave, 45 meters below earth.

Our tour guide was Will. Will had taken a Geology Degree at Brighton University and then followed his passion onto a Masters Degree Course in Palaeontology at Bristol University. Subsequently, Will could answer any question about the cave, lava ropes, lava roses, basalt temperature and liquidity behaviours and why the rocks were all the colours of the rainbow! I asked Will if he had been confident about getting job directly related to his course. He told me,

“I completed my Masters Degree and 2 days later was on a plane to Reykjavik. If you follow what you love and study to Masters or Doctorate Level the jobs come to you. Employers look at the skills they want and approach the relevant high level academic courses. My tutor told me about it, all I had to do was apply and have an interview on Zoom.”

 

Will went onto tell me about other opportunities he could have pursued and how his lecturers at University were also involved in world leading, paid geological/archaeological work alongside their jobs as lecturers; in fact this is a prerequisite to be a lecturer, you must be actively working in the field you lecture on.  Some students from his course went onto work for them on their projects. Will said,

 

“If you want a job with your specific subject ,you can take a job in any area, keep in touch with the University department and specialist monthly journals for their recruitment section and eventually if you want a job you will get one”. 

 

Will’s comments raise some good points about careers and education. Are we encouraging our students to do something they can get a job we recognise, or is it our job to encourage them to find their niche and then work out a way to make it pay? When I look at the student projects for these Universities they say “Our students study real world problems”, these are: Natural disaster warning sensorsAstroids & seismic shakingCrocodile jaw optimisationCarbon in soil.  They are not jobs I would recognise as they are not mainstream, but there is work in those areas and governments are funding it. Also, when you consider that Graduate Trainee Schemes (made up of the top FTSE 100 companies in the UK ) ask for a 2:2 to take graduates to train, they ask for students from ANY DISCIPLINE.  Does it therefore matter if that student has completed a Degree in Knitting (it exists) or a degree in something thought of as more aligned to management functions…like marketing or management? Trinity Newspapers (the biggest publishing company in the world) actively welcome applications from those who have not studied English or journalism at degree level.

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