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Career test for Antioch students

See which careers fit your traits — based on what 262+ Antioch alumni actually went on to do.

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What Antioch grads actually do

Based on 262 notable Antioch alumni with Wikipedia pages. Data: Wikidata (CC0).

writer
48
politician
36
university teacher
35
lawyer
22
novelist
21
journalist
19
film director
18
poet
16
sociologist
13
psychologist
12
screenwriter
12
actor
10

Notable Antioch alumni

Julie Carmen
Julie Carmen
film actor · dancer
Everett Mendelsohn
Everett Mendelsohn
historian of science
Olympia Brown
Olympia Brown
women's rights activist · suffragist
José Ramos-Horta
José Ramos-Horta
head of government · foreign minister
Leonard Nimoy
Leonard Nimoy
film producer · photographer
Theo Hakola
Theo Hakola
songwriter · writer
Winona LaDuke
Winona LaDuke
politician · writer
Roswell G. Horr
Roswell G. Horr
lawyer · politician

Salary outlook for top Antioch career paths

National median annual wage (BLS Occupational Employment Statistics).

writer
10th–90th percentile: $40,900$148,240
$73,690
median / yr
politician
10th–90th percentile: $21,010$129,510
$47,290
median / yr
lawyer
10th–90th percentile: $69,760$239,200
$145,760
median / yr
novelist
10th–90th percentile: $40,900$148,240
$73,690
median / yr
journalist
10th–90th percentile: $31,550$160,360
$57,500
median / yr
film director
10th–90th percentile: $42,040$174,540
$82,510
median / yr

Find your fit in 2 minutes

Take the Career Match test — RIASEC framework used by 60,000+ students. See which careers from this Antioch alumni list match your traits.

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About Antioch

Antioch College is a private liberal arts college in Yellow Springs, Ohio, United States. It was founded in 1850 by the Christian Connection and began operating in 1852 as a non-sectarian institution; politician and education reformer Horace Mann was its first president. The college is named after the ancient city of Antioch where the disciples of Jesus were first named as Christians. The college has been politically liberal and reformist since its inception. It was the fourth college in the country to admit African-American students on an equal basis with whites. It has had a tumultuous financial and corporative history, closing repeatedly, for years at a time, until new funding was assembled. Antioch College began opening new campuses in 1964 when it purchased the Putney School of Education in Vermont. Eventually, it opened 38 different campuses, and in 1978 it changed its name to Antioch University. While most of the university's campuses focused on adult education, graduate programs, and degree completion, Antioch College remained a traditional undergraduate institution on the original campus. In 2008, the university closed the college, but it reopened under new management in 2011 after a group of alumni formed the Antioch College Continuation Corporation and bought from the university both the physical campus and the right to use the name. Antioch has a cooperative education work program mandatory for all students. It is a member of the Great Lakes Colleges Association, the Global Liberal Arts Alliance, and the Strategic Ohio Council for Higher Education. The college is affiliated with two Nobel Prize winners, José Ramos-Horta and Mario Capecchi.

Source: Wikipedia · Licensed under CC-BY-SA 4.0.

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