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what degrees/careers should i go into if i wanna make hella bank? (2 Viewers)

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Bro what. What company is hiring a year 11
Its about having skill, not being a year 11 lmao? You could be 12 years old and be in uni. They wont reject you because you are young, but they will accept you if you know what you are doing. Similar approach for jobs, especially junior/intern level.
 

v.tex

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Its about having skill, not being a year 11 lmao? You could be 12 years old and be in uni. They wont reject you because you are young, but they will accept you if you know what you are doing. Similar approach for jobs, especially junior/intern level.
So did u learn coding urself then?
 

idkkdi

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Bro if ur average in software engineering these days with AI there is no chance ur getting hired
this is kinda true. stay optimistic and whatnot but there is way too optimistic a view of employment here. most fields involving corporate companies are seeing some of the worst employment of interns/grads in ages. if there were people graduating being unemployed before, its a lot worse now with a lot of the classic programs cutting intakes by 30%+

That’s actually false on so many levels. When I was in Year 11, I applied for a junior developer role and got hired for part-time work, earning around $30–40 an hour — made roughly 2k in just a few weeks. My coding skills were average at best, maybe even below what you'd call “skilled” in Australia. And about AI it’s nowhere near taking over IT jobs. Most AI tools still rely on humans to write prompts, validate outputs, debug logic, and build actual systems around the models. It’s more of an assistant than a replacement. In fact, people who know how to use AI efficiently are becoming more valuable, not redundant. The industry still needs developers, engineers, and analysts who understand architecture, security, and integration things AI can’t handle on its own yet.
2025 market seemed a fair bit worse than 2024. 2026 doesnt seem to be going to get better. Maybe itll be alright by the time you guys graduate

As for part-time roles those are easier to come by and if its casual u get 20% loading which makes u hit 30+ on minimum wage rates.

As for AI as an assistant, that is right for now. But a lot of juniors are really just assistants, ie replaceable.
 
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v.tex

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exactly
this is kinda true. stay optimistic and whatnot but there is way too optimistic a view of employment here. most fields involving corporate companies are seeing some of the worst employment of interns/grads in ages. if there were people graduating being unemployed before, its a lot worse now with a lot of the classic programs cutting intakes by 30%+


2025 market seemed a fair bit worse than 2024. 2026 doesnt seem to be going to get better. Maybe itll be alright by the time you guys graduate

As for part-time roles those are easier to come by and if its casual u get 20% loading which makes u hit 30+ on minimum wage rates.

As for AI as an assistant, that is right for now. But a lot of juniors are really just assistants, ie replaceable.
 
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This is sort of true but dependent on the role. For e.g. full jr stack developers are still very high in demand(Good luck replacing front and back end with AI lmao). Dependent on person to person the amount of effort you are going to put in is what you are going to get out. Most people do struggle due to it being very demanding and generally people start to settle in and get comfortable usually when they start uni.
this is kinda true. stay optimistic and whatnot but there is way too optimistic a view of employment here. most fields involving corporate companies are seeing some of the worst employment of interns/grads in ages. if there were people graduating being unemployed before, its a lot worse now with a lot of the classic programs cutting intakes by 30%+


2025 market seemed a fair bit worse than 2024. 2026 doesnt seem to be going to get better. Maybe itll be alright by the time you guys graduate

As for part-time roles those are easier to come by and if its casual u get 20% loading which makes u hit 30+ on minimum wage rates.

As for AI as an assistant, that is right for now. But a lot of juniors are really just assistants, ie replaceable.
 

lunaaaa4403

oh i can use this now cool
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i'm currently sitting my HSCs and feeling pretty lost about what I actually want to do after school. my interests shift constantly, some days I see myself in finance, other days it’s engineering, law, or even medicine. I wouldn’t say I have a clear passion or calling; i just genuinely enjoy challenging myself and i'm drawn to careers that are intellectually demanding and financially rewarding.

i'm very driven by financial freedom and long-term wealth and i really want to understand what industries and degrees in Australia actually offer strong earning potential over time - ideally those with few income ceilings.

for context, I’m a female student studying Mathematics Extension 2, Chemistry, Economics, and English Advanced, so I definitely lean towards the analytical side rather than the creative or essay-based fields.

I’d really appreciate any genuine insights - what degrees or career routes are worth pursuing today in terms of long-term financial growth and opportunity?
thank you!
make ur life easier and do what ur parents do or smth 😭
 

seremify007

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Regardless of which career path Op goes for, they need to actually be half decent at it. Marks/school performance aren't the be all end all determinants of longer term career or financial success.

And even if you pick a subject/field now, it doesn't mean that's where you end up.
 

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