Req 7 — Explore Reading Careers
Nearly every career uses reading, but some careers depend on it every single day. Reading is how professionals gather information, understand details, notice mistakes, explain ideas, and make decisions. This requirement asks you to notice that reading is not just a school skill. It is a work skill.
Three careers that strongly use reading
Librarian or library media specialist
These professionals help people find information, evaluate sources, and use collections well. They read reviews, catalog records, policies, databases, and research requests constantly.
Editor or publisher
Editors read with purpose. They look for clarity, structure, grammar, accuracy, and audience fit. If you enjoy spotting what makes writing stronger, this path may interest you.
Technical writer, researcher, or analyst
These jobs often involve reading dense material, turning it into clearer explanations, and making sure details stay accurate. A person who reads carefully can save time, money, and confusion for everyone else.
You could also research careers such as teacher, lawyer, journalist, grant writer, historian, archivist, policy analyst, or intelligence analyst. The key is to show how reading matters in the actual work.
Career research questions
Bring these answers to your counselor discussion
- Training and education: What classes, degree, or certifications are expected?
- Experience: What beginner steps help people enter the field?
- Expenses: What does training or college usually cost?
- Prospects: Is the field growing, stable, or competitive?
- Pay and advancement: What might an entry-level worker earn, and what comes next?
Reading can take you into stories, service, and careers — and this badge only scratches the surface. The Extended Learning page points to a few strong next steps if you want to keep going.