Historians advance in proportion to their level of education, experience, and personal skills as writers, researchers, or teachers. University teachers usually begin as instructors. The next step is assistant professor, then associate professor, and finally full rank as a professor.
Earnings - Outlook - Resources & Associations and more
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- Anthropologists
- Arborists
- Archaeologists
- Archivists
- Botanists
- Civil Engineers
- Conservators and Conservation Technicians
- Demographers
- Ecologists
- Economists
- Education Directors and Museum Teachers
- Environmental Education Program Directors
- Environmental Lawyers
- Environmental Planners
- Environmental Restoration Planners
- Environmental Scientists
- EPA Special Agents
- Ethnoscientists
- Fish and Game Wardens
- Foresters
- Forestry Technicians
- Futurists
- Genealogists
- Geographers
- Geological Technicians
- Geologists
- Geophysicists
- Historic Preservationists
- Land Acquisition Professionals
- Land Trust or Preserve Managers
- Landscapers and Grounds Managers
- Lexicographers
- Linguists
- Marine Biologists
- Medical Ethicists
- Museum Directors and Curators
- National Park Service Employees
- Naturalists
- Occupational Safety and Health Workers
- Park Rangers
- Political Scientists
- Range Managers
- Recreation Workers
- Sociologists
- Soil Conservationists and Technicians
- Soil Scientists
- Statisticians