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If OP's DD is in fact intelligent and hard working plus networking, she'll he fine. It would take time but things will work out. If not, she would've equally struggled with biology and bio medical as well.
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Even at target colleges, it's rare. Why would they pick art history when there are applied math, CS, engineering, econ, finance, etc. majors. |
| My kid works at one of these firms and they highly value non-quant grads who can do the quant but bring other skills to the table. My kid was a history major. But that may not be what OP’s kid wants to do. Lots of options though. |
My favorite part was where OP suggested they’d have contacted the Dean about it if they’d known sooner. Because it’s the Dean’s job to convince their kid to switch majors!
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Ummm . . . because they wanted to study art history, or also because they wanted art history to be the way they earned a bachelor's degree on their way to a career that will use some of those related skills? |
Insurance companies, Sotheby like auction houses, of course museums obviously come to mind. Another route is do a education masters and then teach history in high school. Often history teachers do very well as administrators. |
| My friend who majored in art history is a curator and department head at the National Gallery of Art. |
Do they have a PhD? |
I was talking about the high profile consulting companies, but then college is not a place for hobbies when you pay $$$ unless you are a trust fund kid. |
In my area, high school teachers with doctorate and AP certification make $150,000 per year, with no need to make rain or worry about layoffs. |
OP’skd doesn’t have a doctorate |
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Your daughter will be a college graduate. Many can't state such.
She'll be fine. |
She will be competing with other college graduates with more marketable degrees for those high paying jobs. Most of the good paying jobs for art history majors are in teaching, which requires a masters/PhD, which means paying even more money to earn a decent salary. There are only so many museum director roles, and a college graduate is certainly not going to get such a job in 3 to 5 years, let alone just out of college. https://research.com/careers/art-history-careers |
Define "high paying" straight out of college. Do you happen to know the median income in the U.S. for a middle class household? A bachelor's degree will go towards at least being in the middle class. Then improve from there. |
+100 I'm a history major who works with other history majors and English majors in fintech. We're fine. I know two art history majors. One became a lawyer and then a judge. The other is from a very wealthy family and makes pottery in Asheville. |