Kids only have 1 interest or passion? |
I think maybe your definition of a finance job is not the same as mine. |
Nice try. The point is that interests change and develop, that there's a difference between assisting your kid and trying to control her, and that no one is shackled to a given career path because of their major in college. |
Some people may get lucky, but on the average looking depressing https://www.collegefactual.com/colleges/emerson-college/academic-life/academic-majors/communication-journalism-media/journalism/#:~:text=Salary%20of%20Journalism%20Graduates%20with%20a%20Master's%20Degree,Their%20median%20salary%20is%20%2442%2C650 "Journalism majors who earn their bachelor's degree from Emerson go on to jobs where they make a median salary of $33,900 a year. This is higher than $30,000" Even with grad degree "Journalism majors graduating with a master's degree from Emerson make a median salary of $35,000 a year" |
| If your child is good at math or science, I'd encourage them to double major or get a minor in a STEM field. There's lots of marketing for tech and medical/pharma companies, and scientific journalism is also a niche. It will give them a hook apart from the other marketing or journalism majors if the economy is sour in a few years when they graduate. |
Maybe. He’s not doing financial analytics. He’s training to be a financial manager. He’s not trading. My sons other friend is doing financial analytics but he doesn’t have a major in communications. |
None of the jobs I named were journalism. |
This is not just for journalism jobs. This is overall for journalism major graduates from Emerson. Many of them are stocking at Walmart, serving at restaurants, etc. |
So is everyone else. But we can't have everyone becoming doctors or lawyers or programmers. Someone has to pick up trash, clean the streets, take your fast food order, drive your Uber, pick up and deliver your fast food order... |
Get your kid pick up trash and deliver fast food |
Yes, I always advice students to get at least a minor in something STEM/ hard business (finance/accounting/economics) if they don't absolutely hate math/science. get whatever major you that excites you, any LA degree will build your critical thinking and develop high level writing skills. But having that STEM/business background will help you have an advantage for getting jobs. While the tech companies do hire people for marketing/writing jobs/etc, it certainly helps to have some STEM background if you want to go into technical writing or marketing at a technical company. It just opens more doors for you |
Once again, who do you think runs business? Not STEM majors. This board is so weird that you seem to think no one exists unless they are in IT. OP, my DH was a journalism major and has had a great career in marketing communications predominately in IT/software industry. Tons of jobs, six figures. That said, I wouldn’t recommend journalism as a major, marketing with a journalism minor sounds like a direct path to Marketing/communications and there are absolutely jobs in that field. |
At most schools, marketing is going to be in the college of business and journalism will be in the communications school. Journalism is a pretty narrow focus, and most communications programs are expanding into digital media, public relations, broadcasting, sports management, etc. The focus is really going to depend on the programs offered at each school. I think a double major or hybrid program across the business school and comm school sounds like a great opportunity. Throw a minor in computer science in there and you'll have a winner! |
PP never mentioned journalism at all, you illiterate simp. |
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As a hiring manager/director -- I've been burned too many times by generic degrees in marketing/communication. It seems to produce individuals who only think and write in sound bites. Get a degrees which develops and advances skills in critical thinking, writing and analysis. I've had greater success in hiring english, history and (believe it or not) anthropolgy majors -- with minors data analytics or econ. I can teach you how to be successful in our company and industry -- but I dont have time to teach you how to think and write
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