Skyblueweeman
Well-Known Member
But is Sports Science really a degree subject.
I graduated in 2001 with a Sports Studies degree. At the time, there weren't many jobs around in the field I was looking at and any that were available were paying circa £9-10k. I therefore thought I'd go into sales for 12 months to get another string to my bow and nearly 13/14 years later, I'm still in Sales/Marketing.
As for your question, yes it is. How do you think Physiotherapists get their training....reading 'Beginners Guide to...' books? I suspect many medical Physiotherapists you'd find in your local hospitals, probably have a degree of that ilk. We live in an age where everything is about keeping fit and healthy...again, people with sports degrees can play prominent roles in these industries, whether this be as PE Teachers (after completing PGCEs if they've gone down the Sports Science route), Physios, Psyhcologists, Personal Trainers, Coaches, Bio-Mechanics experts (all from the Science field) or Sports Development Officers, Statistical Analysts (Studies).
There's also many other transferrable skills picked up from degrees that regardless of the subject matter, can be used in many career paths, such as research skills, document writing, communication skills etc.