I haven't been forced to look for a job on the open market since the days of paper resumes so I can't help with the technical job-seeking part. However, with your job-skills and since tutoring is ruled out, I have one suggestion: free-lance copywriting or copy editing. I believe there is a reasonable demand for people with good editing skills. My company develops websites and online newsletters for major corporations and you'd be amazed at the BAD writing skills of many so-called professionals! I'm now a database programmer but years ago I had my own business doing editing and copywriting. It didn't pay much which is the reason I moved on to software development, but it was steady work. But like I said, that was at the dawn of the personal computer age so I'll leave researching that job market via the internet to you.
The CDC has locations across the country. Always looking for skilled writers for numerous positionshttp://www.cdc.gov/employment/http://www.cdc.gov/employment/recruitment/Also includes a link for those with disabilities. - http://www.usajobs.gov/ I would be extremely careful before signing on with web sites requiring payment. Too many free resources, especially for those with disabilities.
Quote from: noahvale on May 04, 2012, 07:50:45 PMThe CDC has locations across the country. Always looking for skilled writers for numerous positionshttp://www.cdc.gov/employment/http://www.cdc.gov/employment/recruitment/Also includes a link for those with disabilities. - http://www.usajobs.gov/ I would be extremely careful before signing on with web sites requiring payment. Too many free resources, especially for those with disabilities.Working for a government agency, I know right now we cannot hire anyone EXCEPT people with disabilities or Veterans. So if you find a position on usajobs or through a government agency site directly, make sure you indicate that you have a disability