I see.. so an English major needs to either double major or go to grad school to get a good paying job. |
I was an English major and credit it with teaching me how to think critically and creatively. I ended up being a Writer and Creative Director in Advertising and make great money. I also founded my own company. I would do it again assuming they still teach the classics and didn't pivot too hard to only modern works. For example many decolonization efforts aim to remove Shakespeare, Chaucer, etc. You can NOT be an English major without studying Shakespeare because he is so foundational and referenced throughout the rest of the canon. So I would take a look at the department and teachers. It also helps to take some logic and rhetoric classes as well as philosophy. |
| An english major from a T20 university or SLAC will be fine. An english major from Frostburg less so. |
That’s just a default. They’re entry level jobs. If the candidate is smart, articulate, trustworthy and put together well they’ll be fine, no matter the major. Most entry level jobs in business are either sales or ground level management. |
Stupid answer from a stupid person |
I make six figures and a comms director, and well after I was employed in comms, I happened to get a free master’s degree as a benefit of working at a university! |
+1 |
AI will probably look for certain degrees. Not sure "English" is one of those degrees. A lot of companies want people to hit the ground running, so having a rudimentary understanding of business concepts is helpful. |
How long ago was this? I think it's pretty different today. There's a reason why English majors are shrinking in colleges, and even LACs are offering degrees in business and CS. |
The degree doesn’t matter. I have hired dozens of English majors in comms roles. Clips and writing samples, internships, experience, social management, AP style mastery, this is what matters. I’ve hire Millersville over Harvard due to the quality of the clips and the resourcefulness of getting good interviews. |
| Nobody give a f_ what you studied or where. What they do care about is can you add value to the organization. |
| I loved English as a second major. |
| Read a bunch of novels and write about them, easiest possible path to collect a four year degree. |
Do you really think your kid is going to get this great job out of undergrad and that’s that? I think of undergrad as a stepping stone. |
of course, but getting onto that first stepping stone is easier for some majors compared to others.
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