Yahoo Answers is shutting down on May 4th, 2021 (Eastern Time) and beginning April 20th, 2021 (Eastern Time) the Yahoo Answers website will be in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.
Trending News
If you can not think analytically, what jobs suit you?
If you can not think analytically, what jobs suit you?
9 Answers
- Untamed RoseLv 61 decade agoFavorite Answer
If you can NOT...nothing with problem solving, and creativity.
So....factory work I guess.
- 5 years ago
I've never known anyone who got into a good music school without reading music. Then again, I don't know everyone who has gone to music schools. :-) Your best bet is to contact some schools directly [their Admissions offices] and just ask them outright if reading music is a requirement. Then again, it depends on what your goal is -- performance, or composition. If performance, I presume that a jazz focus would be ideal, since improv has a lot to do with that -- in a classical focus, you'd have to be able to learn some classic materials for your graduate recitals. But if it's composition, you need to actually WRITE your compositions so your professors can actually see them, and you need to be able to comprehend the written materials used to teach you the fundamentals of structure. A composition major also includes orchestration classes, meaning you learn about writing music for those instruments that transpose. If a school required you to read music, the good news is that it wouldn't take you that long to learn the basics. Once you learned that, it would simply be a matter of being able to transfer what's in your head [i.e. your current arrangement] onto the page, which would take a little finessing since you're currently "seeing" the music differently in your head than a pianist who reads music would. Finally, you probably know that there are music software programs available wherein you hook an electronic keyboard [with MIDI interface] into a computer and thereby have what you play appear on music manuscript on screen, ready for clean-up or print-out. Though that would help you create materials to send with your college application, I don't know if it would substitute for music-reading skills. Hope this helps.
- VarunLv 61 decade ago
I would say no job suits you , if you can not think analytically.
Analytical thinking is not just for jobs , but also it is required in our day to day life.
- How do you think about the answers? You can sign in to vote the answer.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
I'd advise you to apply for being a receptionist or a clerk Miss..
- Anonymous1 decade ago
A feminist statistician e.g. Section 3 here http://www.freewebs.com/feminism-evaluated
- Anonymous1 decade ago
perhaps a job in the arts- writing, acting, painting, singing, cosmetology, fashion, etc. A job where you need to have strong emotions and are able to express those emotions.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
Interior design, starbucks, fastfood, massage, prostitution (where it's legal, of course), hair dresser/cutter/stylist, HR just about anywhere... and the list goes on.
- 1 decade ago
GWS troll, but it doesn't pay very well and it doesn't generate any respect.
Source(s): Level 2