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Posted By Martin Taylor I am just finishing Nebosh Diploma (thank heavens) and keen to progress safety related education.
What would be the next most logical step NIN.
(that's Not Involving Nebosh)
cheers Martin
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Posted By Charlie0538 Hi Martin,
As the Nebosh Dip is a more generalised course, you may want to look at specialising in one area like fire, construction etc or even breaking that down even further and looking at legionella or accident investigations.
You may also want to look at teaching/training. Most people go so far and say "theres nothing left to do" but what about passing on your knowledge to the new set of H&S bods coming through the ranks.
Just a few options for you.
Charlie
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Posted By David Bannister Hi Martin, well done on gaining the pass.
I suggest that your own aspirations should be the best guide as to what direction you take in furthering your safety education. Perhaps you could take some time off from formal education and discover the areas in health and safety management that either most interest you or you feel weak in. If you are a Member you may have a need for IPD/CPD but that need not involve formal study and perhaps is better if done as a mix between practical skills and theoretical knowledge anyway.
Generally, whichever direction you choose now will involve some specialism (occ hygiene, ergonomics, behavioural science, transport, machine safety... etc etc) and the nature of the specialism is really a very personal one. Too quick a choice may be incorrect for you.
However, if you havce a burning desire to become a fire expert then blaze away (sorry).
Good luck in your choices.
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Posted By Raymond Rapp Martin
Not sure exactly what you mean by safety related training, as there are many types and levels of training. Having just completed your NEBOSH Dip is does seem a bit premature, but then you may have lots of practical experience.
If you want to consider a degree then that would be an advantage and possibly prerequisite for college and university educational courses. It is worth aiming high and a Masters will open some doors in the future.
Good luck.
Ray
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Posted By Martin Taylor thanks for the responses so far everybody
I was looking more for guidance on any well established courses such as MSc or PhD.
I am full time working so distance courses are preferred
thanks
Martin
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