I completed the 80,000 Hours career guide. My primary problem area interests are emotional intelligence, promoting effective altruism, promoting positive values, and mental health.
Based on the career guide exercises, I think that advancing social-and-emotional learning (i.e., improving education) is one of the best methods for these problem areas. There are many SEL organizations that I would like to get involved with possibly as a professor.
Note: If you do not know what social-and-emotional learning is, look it up.
I think that communicating ideas around solving these problems through the media is an effective method as well (i.e., being an influencer). However, emotional intelligence - which includes my other problem areas - is not nearly as neglected in the media as it is in education. There is a lot of videos and books about motivation, hard work, happiness, anxiety, managing emotions, etc.
Currently, I am stuck on whether I should focus on education or the media or both. Can someone provide some advice?
Based on my interests (problem areas, etc.) which career paths might you recommend that I check out other than professor/public intellectual?
It is hard to advise on this without knowing your current situation. Both becoming a professor and becoming an influencer are career paths that are not easy to tread, and recommending one over the other will hinge on where you are in life currently - what is your age, educational background, subject interest (important re: professor), marketable hobbies or content niches (important re: influencer) etc.
I cannot speak to the career of influencers, but if you were to opt for taking a shot at becoming a professor, the #1 priority should be to excel academically and take active steps towards getting into an as high-ranked program as you can for your grad studies.
I am interested in becoming a professor of Education at an Ivy League institution. I looked at the faculty profiles of professors at Ivy League institutions and most of them have degrees from Ivy League institutions (i.e., high-ranked programs).
Thank you! I have been looking into the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
Unless education differs starkly from other disciplines, note that you will apply to all top programs, not one top program. Applying to one program would be foolish as the chance of getting accepted, even if you are a top candidate, is rather on the low end.
Yes, if you intend to become an Ivy League professor, you need to get a degree from a top 5 institution of your field. Note that "becoming an Ivy League professor in my field" is somewhat akin to "becoming a top athlete in my sport", and similarly competitive - just like most folks wont break into the NFL or NBA, most academics (even super smart or diligent ones) will not make it into an Ivy League professorship. That is not meant to discourage you from trying, but you should realize that chances are slim even if you are really good.
Anyways, if that were your career path, you should try to
1. Excel in each course (4.0 GPA)
2. Make regular contact with your teachers (go to office hours to discuss material and questions etc). Try to find mentors, and try to heed their advice often.
3. Scour the web for resources on how grad applications in your chosen discipline work, and maximize what they'll require.
A challenge is to do all this while not losing the passion for your subject - which you should explore, love and enjoy while studying. So I would strongly recommend against this career path unless you feel very distinctly passionate about the subject.