Mine has to take, O Chem, Micro, physics, psych and stats, just like other pre-health majors. They also need anatomy and physiology. The only one that they may not need is biochem. It's is a BS, not a BA. |
Because it's true. Teaching used to pay well before it became female-dominated. Recently nursing has gotten increasingly lucrative because more men are going into that field (mainly to get to CRNA, but still). |
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Neuroscience is popular because its genuinely interesting when you really get into it.
But the way it's being sold is as a "safe" major for both pre-med and social science who don't want to do hard math. Basically, it's the modern equivalent of a psyche degree. Buyer beware. |
What? No. Princeton has a neuroscience building that must have cost a fortune (courtesy of its alums Jeff Bezos and the former Mackenzie Bezos). It's full of MRIs and optical imaging facilities that I'm sure aren't cheap. |
Radiology is at least 60 percent male and neurosurgery is like 90 percent male, so I'm not sure what your point is. It's not sexist to point out that society undervalues most professions that are considered "woman's work" from education and the arts to, increasingly, the life sciences. |
Ob-gyn is predominantly female and has been for almost 2 decades based on residency grads. with salaries of 350-450k it is above general surgery and many male-leaning disciplines. For any MD specialty, the money is there, male or female. Even the lower paid ones make 200k full itme. |
| DS was interested because of his experiences having multiple concussions. He hated his first year bio classes though and switched to QAMO. |
| Also, kids who are pretentious choose it because they think it makes them sound smart. Even if they have a 900 SAT, and all they take is basic coursework to fill out a neuroscience major at directional state school, the secret hope is that their less educated friends and family will ooh and ahh about their genius at family BBQs for years to come. The "rocket scientists" of the moment. |
Which is more psychology which is more biology? |
| DS is debating between a career in clinical psychology and psychiatry. He was advised to major in psychology for clinical psych but neuroscience for psychiatry. He is starting off as a psychology major but minoring in neuroscience to hopefully keep options open. If his first year isn’t too stressful, he is likely to change his minor in neuroscience to a second major. Even if he doesn’t pursue medical school, he feels the coursework will provide a stronger foundation for a clinical psychology program. |
You've got the causality backward. Men are going into nursing because it's lucrative. |
Medicine is arguably the highest earning mainstream profession, and it's female-dominated. It's not that society undervalues "women's work", it's that women are more willing to take low-pay high-satisfaction jobs over high-pay low-satisfaction jobs due to not having to plan to be their future family's primary earner during the career-defining ages of 18-25. |
What a shame - should have at least taken a computational/quantitative neuroscience course before switching |
Yes, my bad |
Major is irrelevant for med school. He should just major in one and take relevant electives across both majors and the rest of the university's offerings |