Out-there student knows exactly where she’s heading
Carla Norton is very clear about why she wants a career in tourism
- it’s the people.
“I love people. I like travelling
and being out there among people.
Tourism allows you to use your
creative flair and to meet a lot
of different and interesting people,”
says the 23 year old Rotorua student.
Now a third of the way through
a year of studies which will result
in a National Certificate in Tourism
and Travel, Carla is adamant that
tourism is where she wants to focus
her career in future.
As such, she’s one of a growing
number of young people who see
this industry as one in which they
can find not only work, but
satisfaction and solid career
prospects, long-term.
Carla’s dream has been assisted,
in no small way, by a national
scholarship from the Aviation,
Tourism and Travel Training
Organisation.
Her’s is one of the five $3000
scholarships provided by ATTTO
each year and for Carla it is proving
to be a tremendous help as she
works her way through her course
at Rotorua’s Waiariki Institute of
Technology.
The young Rotorua woman - who
traces her descent from Tuhoe -
admits that she was something
of a lost soul during her teenage
time, spending the last four years
working at various jobs, mainly
in the retail sector, across the
Tasman in Sydney.
But now she’s back in New Zealand
and has her feet firmly on the
ground. And her sights are set firmly
on a career in tourism.
“I’ve known that this is what I have
wanted to do for years, but I was
too busy doing the teenager thing,”
she says. “My course is my first
step toward getting into tourism
as a long-term career.”
Carla says she initially wanted
to be a travel agent, but she now
thinks that may be too restrictive
and it’s more likely that she will
opt for a hands-on role in tourism.