Welcome to Education by Design's Online store. We have brought to you a selection of products like Books : 200 Best Jobs for Introverts along with it's reviews, pictures and related products. All sales from these pages goes towards the creation and maintenance of our educational online activities, articles and resources. We have over 40,000 online stories submitted by kids around the world.
200 Best Jobs for Introverts
Normal Price:$16.95
Our Price:$11.53
Availability:Usually ships in 24 hours
... For more information or Buy from Amazon.com ...
Manufacturer: JIST Works
Author: Laurence Shatkin
Binding: Paperback
Publication Date: 2007-11
Publisher: JIST Works
Label: JIST Works
Number Of Pages: 420
Features for 200 Best Jobs for Introverts:
Small Picture
Medium Picture
Editorial Review
200 Best Jobs for Introverts helps readers make the best career match for their strengths in just two steps:(1)Review best jobs lists to compare careers and to find those that suit them best. (2) Learn more about their careers of interest through detailed job descriptions.
More than 75 "best jobs" lists include informaiton about the best careers for introverts organized by pay, growth, opening, interests, education, self-employment, part-time work, gender, age, and more. Readers also learn the best jobs ranked by levels of quiet, solitary work, contact with others, autonomy, and direct contact with the public. Extensive descriptions of the 200 best jobs help job seekers, career changers, and anyone doing career research explore promising opportunities that match their unique needs.
Cached date: AWS Called=true
Customer Reviews
Mostly computer & blue-collar jobs 
2008-07-04
The bulk of this book lists blue-collar tradesmen jobs like plumber, boilermaker, repairman, bus driver etc. Also the supposed best introverted jobs are things like computer engineering, software engineer and accounting. There are a few scientific research jobs in the book.
The funniest jobs listed were fashion designer and interior designer, which are entirely teamwork based and extroverted (if you want to be successful at it anyway). I worked in those industries and it was a complete nightmare for an introvert. Constant networking with new clients, meeting with manufacturers daily, dealing with angry & snotty retailers etc. If you were going the design route, I'd recommend jewelrymaking since there's less interaction.
Also, lawyer was pretty laughable being on this list. Maybe if you did wills & trusts or adoption law you'd not have any confrontation at work and be alone most of the day.
I doubt these "Best Jobs" lists have any valid scientific reasoning to them.