A guy I went to undergrad with has a B.Sc. in math. He works at Starbucks.
Much as it pains me to say this, biology seems to be where all the jobs are, or rather the biology jobs that deal with humans. Medical lab technicians and technologists (I'm assured there's a distinction) seem to be in high demand. Most of the chemistry jobs at the bachelor's level involve routine analysis and monitoring of instrumentation. (Incidentally, if you're at all considering grad school, go for the PhD or don't go at all. The Master's is nigh-well useless).
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The first run through of any experimental procedure is to identify any potential errors by making them.
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