URBAN PLANNERS
When you are doing urban planning you plan for land. You get to place where schools, homes, and roads might be located. As an urban planner you also get to create cities and new places. Thanks to urban planners we now have over millions of cities all around the world. If you wish to be an urban planner you must know where you are locating a building. They also need to define how many people should or could live in that area.

To be an urban planner you must have a bachelor’s degree. You have five options to choose from: math, economics, geography, environmental design or political science for your bachelor’s degree. You must work in a planning office and pass the test to officially be an urban planner.

Math is used a lot if you want to be an urban planner. It requires you to determine the area, use mathematical models and find the particular appearance for the future. Math can take you far in urban planning because you would have to find a lot of information based on math. Urban planning is ninety nine point nine percent math. One percent designing or planning.

In order to be an urban planner you must have good drawing skills and be a great speaker and writer. If you wanted to know an urban planner makes about $100,000 year! You have to be organized so that you don’t get things mixed up. They almost always are on their computers so that they can make repots and so that they can animate the building they probably are going to put in that town or city. They are usually hired by professionals or by developers. Plus this job was practiced throughout history starting with the ancient Greeks, Romans, and Asians.
Works Cited
"Math 110. College Algebra." Math 110. College Algebra. Web. 9 May 2012. <http://spiral.byu.edu/Programs/110.html>.
"When Will I Use Math?" We Use Math. Web. 9 May 2012. <http://www.weusemath.com/>.
"Fact Monsterâ„¢ from Information Please ®." Fact Monster: Online Almanac, Dictionary, Encyclopedia, and Homework Help — FactMonster.com. Web. 2 May 2012. <http://www.factmonster.com/>.
"When Will I Use Math?" We Use Math. 2 May 2012. Web. 16 May 2012. <http://www.weusemath.org/>.