| I was an English major, and I got my MD. Now I'm a scientist with great writing and communication skills. |
I don't think I'm exceptional. But I am smarter than the average bear and driven to succeed. That's what makes the difference. |
And I am a Phoenix!
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I love you. |
Driven, huh? Don't you think it's time to get a driver's license?
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Wha? |
| English major, Masters in Social Work. Doing pretty well, thanks. |
Incidentally, I make 85k a year and could earn more except that I love my family-friendly job (not in a big firm). Obviously I'm no millionaire, but I'm happy. Oh, and another thing, the liberal arts majors I know are certainly among the smartest I know. I'm just saying that generally speaking, we aren't rolling in it. |
Yep. English undergrad. Georgetown Law. Biglaw salary and a love of books and discourse. Learning how to write and communicate is key to landing good jobs. |
Perhaps. But really, your undergraduate major has very little bearing on how far you will go in life. People who believe this are either willfully ignorant or woefully misinformed. |
| Art history is worse! |
| My father was an English major - when he graduated his first employer agreed to hire him if he would go back to school on the company nickel and "learn something." So he became a very well educated metallurgist. This was 1951. |
And this one anecdote proves. . .what, exactly? |
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Yeah, I don't agree with the assertion that liberal arts grads aren't successful. I look forward to my son studying classics at a SLAC, and eventually going to med school after finishing the pre-med requirements through such a program. Will he do it? Don't know. Will I be a jerk about forcing him too? Absolutely not. But I think families can influence their children through providing a solid foundation, just like a solid liberal artus undergraduate major.
If he wanted a trade, and it turned out he had an aptitude for fixing cars, carpentry, or plumbing, I would encourage the study of the trade and skip college. College shouldn't be a trade school in my view. I suppose others have a different image of the purpose of a university education. We can differ I suppose. |
Wrong. I know a guy who worked at Goldman Sachs who studied art history and actually won several clients by being knowledgable about their art. Boy, you business majors sure are smug jerks. |