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Chemist

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AVG. SALARY

$78,230

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EDUCATION

Bachelor's degree

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JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

You're an industrial chemist working for a pulp and paper company. It's your job to design, monitor, evaluate and modify chemical processes.

Lately, things have been pretty hectic at the plant. Everyone has been rushing to get a new chemical solution ready for production. Today is the day when it's supposed to be manufactured on a large scale. And the company executives want the solution put into full use by tomorrow. Everyone is tense, hoping the production goes off without a hitch so they can start using it tomorrow.

In spite of the big rush, you decide you want to test the solution one last time after it's gone through the mixing process. You're responsible for the solution, so you want to take some extra time to make sure everything's all right.

Unfortunately, after the testing, you don't feel any more certain of the solution than you did before. According to the test, the level of acidity is just slightly higher than what it should be. It's not a drastic difference, and it could just be the result of a rushed test. Still, it's not exactly what it should be.

You're torn about what to do next. You'd like to run the test again, but if you do, the whole factory will have to wait for you to finish. If you get bad test results again, you may very well have to halt production altogether and take the solution back to the lab.

Your other choice is not to re-test the solution. Yet if the acidity levels really are off, you might be responsible for an industrial-sized batch of bad solution. That would delay the whole manufacturing process too.

Either way, people are going to be looking to you for explanations. What do you do?

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