How SAS is using Data and AI to help protect the planet
From Casual to Store Manager: Meet Teagan from Target
7 Reasons to Choose a Career in Medical Imaging
Blowing up rocks for a living at Mawsons
Australia’s Green Jobs Boom
World Environment Day 🌏
How SAS is using Data and AI to help protect the planet
World Environment Day is on June 5, and this year we're looking at the role data and AI play in protecting the planet.
From tracking deforestation and predicting extreme weather to reducing energy waste, the technology is already doing serious work. SAS, a global leader in data and AI, is at the forefront, and careers in this space are growing fast.
You don't need to be a scientist to be part of it, either. Curiosity about data, technology, and the environment is a pretty good place to start.
Teagan Brown didn’t walk into her first shift at Target with a career plan. She was 15, in Year 9, and just looking for a job where she could pick up some useful skills while figuring out what she wanted to do.
What she didn’t expect was to fall in love with retail, or to still be there more than a decade later, running her own store.
Everyone talks about the cool tech in medical imaging. Nobody talks about what the job is really like day to day.
We cover seven things people don't tell you about careers in radiography, sonography, and nuclear medicine, and why they might actually change your mind about the field.
Blowing up rocks for a living (it's more technical than it sounds)
Seb didn't plan a career in blast hole drilling. He started at Mawsons as a quarry plant operator, watched his first blast, and went from there.
Two years in, he's travelling between quarries across regional Victoria and NSW, drilling rock faces, and setting up blasts. No qualifications required.
Explore Careers acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the lands and waters across Australia. We pay our respects to Elders past and present, and extend that respect to all First Nations peoples today.