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College and University Discussion
Reply to "Is Communications a liberal arts major or a vocational major?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]It's where they stick athletes and admits they made a mistake on who are incapable of the math required for a business or stem major or the writing and research required for a liberal arts major [/quote] Is that true for all schools? My daughter is actually really interested in this…[/quote] A major is usually only 25% of college coursework. So it doesn't control/dominate the experience. When people feel concerned about a major, I always suggest dual majoring. English major counts are declining. I see Communications, like Marketing, as a more commerce-oriented field, but I believe these topics are worthy of being college majors so I don't think they should be disdained. I have no association between athletes and Communications. Only with Kinesiology, P.E. Education, and Sports Management majors. I learned about kinesiology from watching player bios during games. I associate Communications with women who might otherwise go into English or Marketing.[/quote] No need to double major, just take courses in other subjects and find the applied ones that'll lead to a job. Major in the fun, coursework in the things that'll get you the job[/quote] Would these Comm majors be over or under subscribed, compared to history, sociology, ethnic studies, American studies?[/quote] That would likely depend heavily on the school. Look for data on bachelor's degrees awarded. Not all schools would have every major you listed. National stats don't matter because local job markets vary. I personally am in favor of having a practical-sounding major. That's why dualing or minoring is useful. You get more chances to talk about that factoid "What's your major" than chances to list or discuss individual classes.[/quote]
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