I am an editor and can assure you that the ability to write coherently is not an easy skill to master. If it were, my job would be so much easier. Then again, I might not be working as much as I do. |
| I was a humanities major, and ITA that STEM is much harder. I knew a lot of STEM kids who could write as well as I could, yet could do math/science I could not master. |
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The basic issue has to do with the role of college/education. Does one go to college to develop the skills to get a good, well-paying job?
In days gone by, when employment opportunities were abundant, most majors could lead to a job. Today that is less the case. One cannot justify spending $100K to $200K+ for what would merely be an exercise in intellectual masturbation and then not be employable at a salary that would enable one to lead a comfortable life as well as pay off those student loans. |
Why is the pay so bad |
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I'm not going to read all of these posts, because this topic was sort of addressed in the thread about philosophy majors.
I started as a math major in college. I was very good at math. I enjoyed doing math. But after speaking with people about what the high-paying math jobs were, I realized that I wouldn't want to do the jobs that pulled in the high salaries because I wouldn't want to do that 8 hours a day, 5 days a week (I'm talking about jobs with insurance companies, which at the time were the best-paying math-related jobs). So I would likely go into teaching, and math teachers don't pull in salaries to write home about. So I kind of decided at that point to just major in what really made me feel alive, and as much as I loved the comfort of numbers, my math courses were very dull (even higher level math). In retrospect, I probably would have enjoyed physics more than math, but where I went to university, they didn't have a really strong physics program. The math department was stellar, as was the biology department, but they didn't have much in the way of a physics program. My understanding of biology was that you really needed more than a BS to get any kind of high paying job. And even physics isn't a sure path to a high paying job. There also was no engineering degree at my college, and while I was open to changing majors, I didn't want to switch to a different university. So I switched to a liberal arts double major. |