If your school hours are flexible, and you can find such a job, you can also consider an inverted approach:
Find a full time job that doesn’t require constant action, something where you spend most of the time on stand by—Let’s say a not-so-busy call center, or a rarely visited shop. That way, you can spend all of the standby time studying.
The downsides are obvious—The job itself will likely be something you don’t enjoy, and the hours you spend doing it won’t give you any new skills. The upside is that you pick any skill to improve in the standby hours, and you get a fulltime pay.
Now, it isn’t easy to find a job where you have that much downtime, and where they tolerate you doing something unrelated, but if you could meet all the prerequisites, I think it would be worth it.
If your school hours are flexible, and you can find such a job, you can also consider an inverted approach:
Find a full time job that doesn’t require constant action, something where you spend most of the time on stand by—Let’s say a not-so-busy call center, or a rarely visited shop. That way, you can spend all of the standby time studying.
The downsides are obvious—The job itself will likely be something you don’t enjoy, and the hours you spend doing it won’t give you any new skills. The upside is that you pick any skill to improve in the standby hours, and you get a fulltime pay.
Now, it isn’t easy to find a job where you have that much downtime, and where they tolerate you doing something unrelated, but if you could meet all the prerequisites, I think it would be worth it.
Traditionally, that is the job of the night watchman (security guard night shift, in modern parlance).