There are many careers that require little if any math skills. Flipping Hamburgers requires no math skills. Guarding prisoners requires very little math skills although you might at some time be asked to count the number of prisoners who are in a particular place. Mowing lawns can be done with no math skills. There are lots more.
they don't.
well... bankers use math all the time. they use it to find the interest. example: the person borrows 1000 dollars from the bank and say the interest is 2% monthly, so the banker can use math in that case. Also, when the banker invests on things, they use math to predict what their profit is, it can be negative ( a loss of money) or they can gain.
Not much. In any case, you won't need advanced math (like trigonometry, algebra, calculus, logarithms...) which you only use in science and engineering careers.
Actuary!
The best career for someone who likes math would be an accountant or if you were into art as well you could become an architect.
yes
they don't.
Any career that is not just tedious repetitive tasks will inevitably require the use of math.
Yes. We don't always notice the use of math, in the jobs we do, but all jobs involve the use of math in one form or another. We teach Math in school because in our modern world we do need to know some Math. However some careers need less difficult Math then others.
I don't think you could find a career that doesn't .
noobs
This is a tough question. There aren't many jobs that use monomials and polynomials daily but if you want to have a career as a math teacher you have to know this.
Any career that has "engineering" in its name will require lots of math skills. If you enjoy math, and are good at it, great. Otherwise, you may want to think twice before you enter into such a career.Any career that has "engineering" in its name will require lots of math skills. If you enjoy math, and are good at it, great. Otherwise, you may want to think twice before you enter into such a career.Any career that has "engineering" in its name will require lots of math skills. If you enjoy math, and are good at it, great. Otherwise, you may want to think twice before you enter into such a career.Any career that has "engineering" in its name will require lots of math skills. If you enjoy math, and are good at it, great. Otherwise, you may want to think twice before you enter into such a career.
well... bankers use math all the time. they use it to find the interest. example: the person borrows 1000 dollars from the bank and say the interest is 2% monthly, so the banker can use math in that case. Also, when the banker invests on things, they use math to predict what their profit is, it can be negative ( a loss of money) or they can gain.
Not much. In any case, you won't need advanced math (like trigonometry, algebra, calculus, logarithms...) which you only use in science and engineering careers.
Actuary!
The best career for someone who likes math would be an accountant or if you were into art as well you could become an architect.