Forensic Anthropologist

What To Learn

High School

What high school courses should you take if you're interested in this career? Get your answers from the Education cluster Biotechnology Research & Development pathway, Local, State, & Federal Services pathway, Teaching, Training, & Facilitation pathway, Physical Health pathway.

Insider Info

Education

dotForensic anthropologists need college degrees. Most hold master's degrees. PhDs are required for teaching and may help pave the way for promotion to supervisory positions.

dotThere are no specific degree requirements for forensic anthropologists. "There is no such thing as direct training," says professor and consultant Karen Burns. "One doesn't go directly there.

"They have to get their degree in biology, in chemistry, in physics, in something that gives them the information, the background. It's not one field, it's multidisciplinary. Forensic anthropology is only one of the forensic sciences, and there's a broad range of backgrounds required."

dotConsultants will need both business sense and communication skills in order to market themselves and find enough work to survive.

dotCall up your regional coroner's office and ask for the name of a working forensic anthropologist. An expert is probably your best resource for finding out more about this career.