No license is generally required to become a paranormal investigator. However check with your state licensing boards as there may be special cases in some states especially if you intend to work with private clients.
The paranormal is one field of science that you don't necessarily have to go to collage for. However it helps to have some kind of expertise or mastery in this field before you go out and play with the night.
No formal education is necessary to become a private investigator. However, a bachelor's degree in criminal justice or law may prove useful in becoming an skilled private investigator.
We need to distinguish between "paranormal investigators" and "parapsychologists". Paranormal investigators may or may not do their work as a profession. Many in fact are amateurs or hobbyists. Those that are working full-time are rare. Many have college educations, but in various fields. There is no college degree for "paranormal investigation" per se. Applicable degrees might be in the sciences or the humanities. But actually coming to learn about paranormal investigation would require self-study and participation in credible investigating groups. Some paranormal investigators become interested in the field as an extension of their regular work as engineers, physicists, psychologists and even police. Parapsychologists are mainly academics. While Parapsychology degrees have been offered at universities all over the world at the Bachelor, Master and PhD levels, they are not very common in the United States today. Most working research parapsychologists (of which there are a few hundred in the entire world) have advanced degrees, generally in psychology, physiology, neurology, or some other field of medicine or general science. Some are degreed in philosophy, education or history as well. Research parapsychologists publish their work in peer-reviewed journals such as the Journal of Parapsychology published by the Rhine Research Institute in Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina (www.rhine.org) in the U.S. The European Parapsychology Journal is a similar peer-reviewed journal in Europe. Parapsychologists also publish in other scientific journals as well.
The forensic science license can be obtained in college these days. The careers are mostly in the crime scene investigator area to help law enforcement solve crimes.
No. Models do not need to have a license, certificate, diploma, degree or any other kind of certification.
in order to become a commercial electric contractor, you MUST have your business contracting license and you should have an electrical contractors license.
Try academies or institutes run by private investigators.They know better about what training a private investigator should possess. Or find if the sponsoring company is still active in the industry and choose it.
You'll need a contractor's license issued by your state. To see how to get this, visit http://www.contractors-license.org/
To become a peanut or any other kind of vendor at a Major League ballpark you must apply for a vendor's license. After procuring the license, apply for permission at a number of ballparks.
Both try to discover mysteries. A historian tries to figure out secrets from the past. An investigator tries to find out other mysteries depending on what kind of investigator.
There is no schooling. just a business license. but schooling may be helpful
It depends on what kind of paranormal group you will end up working for.... i know that the group that i work for and many other groups see paranormal investigating as community service and receive no pay.