Can i be Forensic scientist?

what do you have to be to become a forensic scientist? and whats the difference between a crime scene investager?
Answers:
y
The first step to becoming a forensic scientist is to forget everything you ever learned on CSI.

Then, if you're still within school, get the best grades you possibly can. Universities are currently waturated with culture who watched too much CSI, so the entrance grades into the relevant courses are quite high. Sciencxe and reckoning courses are a must.

Enrol in a forensics or forensic chemistry course as university. Prepare for the fact that jobs within the field are very limited.

Crime scene investigators and forensic scientists are amazingly different. Unlike on cop dramas, a CSI will investigate a crime scene and take relevant samples and photographs, which are then sent to labs for analysis. Forensic scientists work inside those labs -- they don't investigate crime scene and they don't do any detective work. They get the samples and deduct the relevant results from them. Depending on the specialty, they may draw some conclusions -- approaching an autopsy person finding a cause of death. This information then goes back to the investigators and lawyer and suchlike.
I thought about a career surrounded by forensic science for a while, but decided against it due to the low number of jobs.
As other people hold mentioned, it is nothing like any of the glamourised roles you see on TV. In reality it ability spending long hours in a lab and having very fitting laboratory practice. It can also involve being called out at any time to collect samples and beside career progression you can be asked to present evidence as an expert witness in a court of law.
There are a range of courses based on forensic science, however it appears that employers tend to favour former students who have studied a science (for example chemistry or molecular-level biology). Perhaps the best option get into forensic science would involve studying for a science level and then a masters degree in forensics.
The key difference between a forensic scientist and a crime scene investigator (scene of crime officer) is that the scientist will spend most of his/her time in the lab, investigating DNA/chemical residues etc. whilst the CSI will be dusting for prints/collecting samples. Also, it is not totally necessary to own a degree to be a CSI (although I'm sure it couldn't hurt in a competitive job marketplace!), whilst it is to be a forensic scientist (mainly because there are so few jobs going).
Good luck! Source(s): http://www.connexions-direct.com/jobs4U/…
http://www.connexions-direct.com/jobs4U/…
you have to be ****-hot at science and maths and physics and english and EVERYTHING
Ever seen CSI? A forensic scientist works in the lab, and a crime scene investigator goes out onto the pasture. Years and years of college are needed for both these, so if you're serious you better get crackin.

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