People go to MIT for humanities? |
They're amazing at the humanities. |
so...not the humanities |
| They may not qualify as top schools for OP, but Holy Cross and NYU have low percentages of STEM students and focus more on humanities. |
Georgia Tech Virginia Tech Caltech Johns Hopkins And plenty more. |
You are really not coming across as very bright... DP |
Caltech and Johns Hopkins are not good at the humanities. You can't even major in a majority of liberal arts subjects at Georgia tech, for crying out loud! |
What on earth are you talking about? All of the above schools have vibrant and highly regarded liberal arts schools. DP |
I said what I’m talking about. Where’s the confusion. Also show me where these highly regarded liberal arts subjects are, not schools. IR is a social science, not a humanities subject- if that’s what you’re referring to for JHU. You literally can’t major in most of the humanities subjects at Georgia tech- go check for yourself. |
Ok, perhaps GT was a bad example. All of the other schools listed indeed offer humanities and liberal arts majors. https://apply.jhu.edu/academics/majors-minors-programs/ https://liberalarts.vt.edu/academics/majors-and-minors/majors.html https://www.hss.caltech.edu/undergraduate-studies/faqs#:~:text=In%20addition%20to%20the%20humanities,courses%20in%20film%20studies%2C%20at |
Only about 28.9% of students intend to pursue a BSE, according to Princeton survey. https://projects.dailyprincetonian.com/frosh-survey-25/academics.html |
That’s pretty high, especially now that you have to add all the operations, math, bio, chem, neuro, physics, etc. |
You said they were highly regarded. |
My child received four fully funded federal government scholarships to learn Russian in high school including immersion abroad. Why? Because it is a language deemed essential to our nation’s national security. I’m not the least worried about him finding employment if he continues to pursue the language and, unless the current administration cuts the funding, there are similar federal programs to encourage American youth to become professionally fluent in critical languages in college. These programs were initiated by George W. Bush when we didn’t have sufficient government interpreters in Arabic during the Gulf War and had to rely on foreign interpreters. This is not about poetry and paying for a useless degree. |
And they are. Not sure what your problem is, but I guess I'm past caring at this point. |