Career Industries to Enter After You Learn Welding

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Throughout their education, students inevitably ask themselves what they will be qualified to do upon completion of their studies. Individuals in full degree programs and technical studies alike ask this, and the answers vary. Four-year degree students might major in education, with the logical career path being teaching, or perhaps they study communication, which is broad-based and can lead to careers in journalism, advertising, marketing and more. Technical education, however, provides essential skills training for specialized work, tracking students toward a particular set of careers. Welding training allow this freedom of varied opportunities, as welders are needed in so many different industries. So why learn welding? Just look at the different fields you could work in!

Welding Focus Areas

An education focused on welding techniques and technologies has the potential to lead students down a number of welding career paths. Some of the most common include repair, the arts, and construction, among others.

  • Repair – “Repair” is an umbrella term which encompasses opportunities in several areas. Frequently, qualified welders find themselves in public administration repair positions, charged with maintaining the overall structure of bridges, utilities, or even government bases. Alternatively, you might find a niche within auto repair, fixing cosmetic and safety issues. Still more, facilities maintenance might be the right call, as plants like steel mills and refining plants frequently need professionals to evaluate and repair the machinery involved in everyday processes.
  • Art – Artists nowadays work with all sorts of media. You might usually think of paint on canvas, but art is much more than that. Private sculptors create unique works of art with metal manipulation, something that’s achieved by various welding processes. Additionally, another artsy profession, set design, requires individuals to be adept at both construction and creativity in order to develop and accurately weld set pieces in the entertainment field.
  • Construction – Indeed most people probably think of welding as “making something.” That’s pretty accurate, especially in construction. Skyscrapers and highway systems alike rely on welders to do their parts. Early phases of building construction involve laying both the foundation and skeletal support structures, all of which must be precision welded before and after they’re erected. Additionally, construction welders may complete simple jobs like building fencing or more complex ones like extending a subway system, building gas pipelines or creating pollution control devices. These professional welders are often part of the overall design process, lending both their skills and advice along the way.

This is just a sampling of paths for welders to take to land fulfilling and challenging welding jobs. Additional options include working in oil/natural gas in maintaining drilling rigs or doing custom work with motorcycles. Believe it or not, you might even find yourself in a robotics or engineering position, as welding has become quite high-tech, incorporating the use of lasers and robots.

Sources:
http://www.welding.com/welding.asp
http://www.careersinwelding.com/why_welding.php
http://www.wisegeek.org/what-are-the-different-welding-jobs.htm#

 

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