This is the correct answer. |
\ This is not a trait I associate with gender studies majors. |
Agreed. The people who are all "I majored in gender studies and make $800k now!" are certainly highlighting the need for a rigorous program of study and the apparent lack of it inherent in their education! |
LOL! |
That may be a bias on your part. How many do you know personally? |
And that’s only because you have preconceived notions and have likely never met one. You don’t know what you don’t know. Kind of goes with the whole being frequently wrong but rarely in doubt thing you got going on. |
It doesn't work that way. You're admitted to the college first as a liberal arts student. You declare your major later. |
I was a gender & sexuality studies major. Speaking of "being frequently wrong but rarely in doubt"... |
Around 100. |
My graduate degree is a joint Gender Studies + public policy degree. I run a very successful consulting firm, working with associations, political candidates, and very large non-profits. It's the most useful degree I know, as it made me learn to look at other possibilities, other outcomes, and not to believe that the standard quo needs to continue to be the norm. I wish your daughter much luck and success - I know she will have it! |
| A double major or minor might be ok but I would major in something more substantial. |
Perhaps that says more about you than it does about them. |
Why? Give it a rest. And no one asked for your opinion about that. Was that the focus of the original post question? No. I’m so annoyed with the direction of this thread. Entirely illustrates the deterioration of this site. |
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Look at the top liberal arts schools. She will leave college, regardless of her major, with top writing and analytical skills and a well-rounded education.
If she’s thinking about pre-med, make sure she hits the science/math pre-requisites. If she is thinking pre-business, make sure she has the math. And take those early. I put math off for my first two years and it was a beast to come back to. But a liberal arts degree is a great foundation for any number of careers. It’s ok not to be STEM. |
Yeah OP is trolling. |