| There is nothing better than a liberal arts education that teaches you how to write and analyze. If you learn that, the rest is easy to get in the job or in grad school. |
| My DD goes to Emory. They have an excellent one-credit course called the Liberal Arts Edge (I think course number is ECS 102) that helps students use the university resources to build their resumes, practice interview skills, find research opportunities/internships/jobs, etc. |
Like what? |
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No. Force them into STEM whether they have an interest or aptitude in it. I’ve found that always works well with people.
And if they refuse let them take out loans to pay for college. That’ll show them. |
| "Let" ? |
| What “you” want is totally irrelevant. It’s not “your” decision. |
+1 math and physics are liberal arts majors too. The point should be to develop a skill and internship plan along with a major. |
Right - the point is this person developed a portfolio of work (similar to getting serious internships). Didn’t rely on a major. |
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Op--- you can study STEM related disciplines at a liberal arts college. What is your DC interested in?
A liberal arts education was my ticket to becoming a multi- millionaire by age 40. I would repeat it in a heartbeat. |
| Sure. But i wouldn't encourage continuing for a PhD like his stupid stubborn parents did. |
If your DC decides to learn Arabic that will be incredibly beneficial later on. Some of my family members have been offered amazing job opportunities bc their fluency in Arabic is very attractive in certain fields. |
Yeah but living in Dubai sucks, actually. |
| It depends on what your child is studying in liberal arts. If she is studying math and has a plan to be a math teacher, go for it. If she wants to study sociology because she likes sociology, I probably wouldn't be funding something like that. Honestly, college is more about making yourself marketable and checking a box than anything else. Most majors are repetitive (read, write, memorize, test, over and over and over) so you aren't actually learning applicable skills anyway. |
| My ds was a biochem major with a minor in English. There was initial talk of a double major, but we encouraged him to start with the intention of an English minor and then 'see what happens', but we wouldn't have forbidden him from the English major if that was what he wanted. He's brilliant, so I expect he would have used that major to excel somewhere. If he had been angling for the liberal arts major because he thought it was easier and was struggling, then we would have intervened. (Though an English major at his school was not an easy path, either). |
| Sure, why not? I would try hard not to steer my kid away from something they were passionate about…unless it was acting or dance or art. |