| I majored in education, but got a second degree in education. I’d she’s willing to go into elementary education, then she’ll always be employable. If she’s not, I’d minor in anthropology and get a better second major. |
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Has the way that this worked changed a lot in the last 30 years?
I went to a fancy-sounding school but I never thought it really mattered what I studied, and still don't. Heck I even think that a bit for my master's, in my case |
Tell me you work in a non-STEM field without telling me you work in a non-STEM field. |
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The importance of a "practical major" is inversely proportionate to both your family wealth and the prestige of your university.
If you are from a rich family and get in to Harvard, then yeah, it doesn't matter what you study. If you're from a poor family and you go to State U branch campus, then yeah, you better study engineering. |
ie, get ready to spend more money for letting her learn whatever she wants. |
Psychology can be highly paid However, you need a masters degree at least and look the part. Good psychologists in Fairfax, VA for instance, generally charge between $100 and $250 an hours. A PhD is better. |
It’s somewhat inverted. Most people coming into practical majors, esp engineering come from lower middle class families. They don’t have connections nor FOB resources to optimize career strategy. Also many of them like are passionate about science or tech which sometimes makes less optimal career choices. |
Now we know what Warren Buffet is doing in his retirement — posting on DCUM! |
This was me. I majored in physics at MIT planning on getting a PhD right away. But I had no family money, had to help family, got an engineering job right away. Have had an interesting career in various fields but never got a physics PhD. |
+1 Major in what you like. But realize that there are not very many jobs for a BA in Psychology or Anthropology specifically. So you have to be a bit more motivated/creative with finding your first few jobs. You have to work harder to get an internship. That being said, IMO I would major in what you want but consider a minor in business or something that will help you have skills for getting hired. And know that both of those majors require advanced degrees to actually "use the degree" directly. |
Smart to suggest adding in the Data Science. It will open doors to many other areas as well. That is what OP DD needs to do. Start to figure out what she actually wants to do. Because like you said a IA major is more practical than just a history major. and your son gave it focus with the security concentration and data science (BS is almost always better than BA, it's more rigorous) |
Would love to know where this major is - sounds like up my son’s alley! |
Smart move---even if she were at a State U (non pricey schools). If a major offers a "more rigorous" option, it's usually smart to pursue that. Only time it's not, is say for a CS degree in the LA school versus Engineering school. If your kid wants to take 2-3 years of a foreign language and use their CS degree in conjunction with that or some other LA concentration, then it might make more sense to get a BA. Otherwise, get the BS |
But anyone interviewing from those pricey LAC knows there are two Econ majors, and if you pick the "easier one" without having a valid reason (say a concentration in Foreign language or something else that is a real concentration with meaning for future employment), then they know you took the easier path |
So not true!! Plenty of engineering majors come from UMC/wealthy families. they just like STEM and pursue it. Or they are smart enough to know they can always fall back to business later on with an MBA if engineering isnt' their thing. Most that stick with Engineering are really smart and enjoy what they do |