Career Advice for Students

Honest UK career advice for students - choosing subjects, work experience, apprenticeships vs university, first jobs, and what to do when you genuinely have no idea.

By Tony Musso on

A student with a coffee cup leans against a sunny stone wall while talking to an older mentor on a college campus.

Most career advice for students treats your 17-year-old self like a project manager who has already costed a 40-year plan. You have not, because nobody has. This guide is the version that assumes you are still figuring it out - and that figuring it out is the normal state, not a failure.

The aim here is simple: a small number of decisions that keep the most doors open, and a clear answer to "what do I do if I have no idea?".

The one rule that matters most

Pick the next step that gives you the most future options for the least irreversible cost.

Every choice below comes back to that rule. Closing doors at 17 is rarely necessary. Closing them at 21 is sometimes useful. Almost no decision a student makes is permanent - but some are expensive to undo.

Choosing subjects without closing doors

For GCSE and A-Level, the question is not "what will I do for a career?" - it is "what keeps the most options open?"

  • Maths and English at strong grades open almost everything.
  • A science at A-Level keeps medicine, engineering, and most STEM degrees on the table.
  • A facilitating subject (maths, sciences, English lit, history, geography, languages) at A-Level keeps most Russell Group degrees on the table.
  • A creative or vocational subject alongside is fine and often useful.

Avoid choosing the full A-Level set based on a single career idea you have right now. The career idea will change; the grades stay on your record.

Work experience that actually counts

Work experience is the cheapest career test you will ever get. It is not about the CV line - it is about finding out whether you can stand the work.

Useful experience:

  • A real job, even part-time (retail, hospitality, lifeguarding). Teaches you employability, money, and how to deal with adults at work.
  • A shadowing day or week in a field you think you want. One day in a courtroom, hospital, or studio will tell you more than a year of brochures.
  • A volunteer role that involves responsibility, not just attendance.

Less useful:

  • Generic "insight days" you sat through quietly.
  • Anything your parents arranged where you did not do real work.

Two strong experiences beat eight weak ones.

Apprenticeship vs university

Both are valid. The right answer depends on the field, the cost, and how you learn.

An apprenticeship is usually better when:

  • The field has a clear apprenticeship route (trades, accounting, nursing, engineering, parts of tech, law via solicitor apprenticeships).
  • You learn better by doing than by reading.
  • You want to avoid student debt.
  • You want to be earning while you train.

University is usually better when:

  • The field genuinely requires a degree (medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, academic research, most science careers).
  • You want the time and space of an undergraduate course.
  • The degree apprenticeship for your target career either does not exist or is highly competitive.

Both are defensible. A degree apprenticeship - degree-level qualification, paid, employer-sponsored - is often the strongest of all three when it exists in your field.

Your first job after sixth form or uni

Your first job is not your career - it is a learning year you happen to be paid for. Optimise it for two things:

  • One concrete skill or qualification you can name at the end of it.
  • One environment where you can see how grown-ups actually work.

Salary matters less than learning at this stage, provided basic costs are covered. A first job that bores you for a year while paying for AAT or a CIPD qualification is doing more for your career than a flashier role that teaches you nothing. For the question of when to move on, read [how long you should stay in your first job](/blog/how-long-should-you-stay-in-your-first-job-before-moving-on).

When you genuinely have no idea what to do

This is the most common situation, not a problem.

  1. Stop trying to pick a 10-year career. Pick a next step.
  2. Take the [TonyKnows career assessment](/assessment) - 10 minutes, gives you a small number of directions to consider.
  3. From those directions, talk to one person doing each job. Real conversation, not LinkedIn scrolling.
  4. Pick whichever feels most "I could try this for 12 months" and commit to a next step (a course, an application, a placement).
  5. Reassess at the end of the year with real information you did not have today.

You are not behind. You are at the start.

Where to go next

  • For the decision framework once you are in your 20s: [How to Make Career Choices in Your 20s](/blog/how-to-make-career-choices-in-your-20s).
  • For first-job-specific timing: [How Long Should You Stay in Your First Job?](/blog/how-long-should-you-stay-in-your-first-job-before-moving-on).
  • To explore the full UK careers list: [explore career paths](/careers).