Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I majored in English. Currently SAHM, previously was doing the attorney thing, in a not-prestigious job.
DH majored in a foreign language, now a big law partner.
So many liberal arts majors go the attorney route, but I’d advise against that unless you get a sense for what it’s actually like to be an attorney. I wasn’t really cut out for it (though I did fine), but DH actually likes his job. Plus there are so many different kinds of attorneys and everyday life is different for all of them.
The advice I plan on giving my kids is 1) don’t go into lots of debt for a liberal arts degree 2) keep in mind that there are so, so many different kinds of jobs out there that you probably have never heard of. I think the most important things are building connections in a way that suits your personality and being open to new opportunities. I wouldn’t worry too much about a major yet. After all, lots of liberal arts majors go into tech. You don’t actually need a ton of STEM classes to do many of those jobs well.
Gosh I hate it when I skim the OP and miss important info. Just ignore all the attorney stuff
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Anonymous wrote:Hi! Just curious if you were any of the above majors, could you tell me what you do now. Or if your child is studying any of the above things, what do you think they will do with it.
DD simply arbors math, physics and thinks she hates any kind of science. Sad, she had a really lousy biology teacher freshman year at her school and is so turned off. Whatever.
Doesn’t want to be a lawyer, teacher, or librarian. Teachers are so horribly treated theses days and I am a librarian and they finish lowest on the totem pole in my federal agency. Unappreciated and underpaid.
I am asking because we are trying to choose colleges that might have additional areas that she can minor in to make such a degree more marketable.
Wish I had a stem kid. But I don’t! Sweet kid. NO STEM.
Anonymous wrote:My DS is a Spanish major - not sure what he will do with it. Translate for a big company? Marketing in Spain or Mexico? Work for CIA or other fed? Or basically work anywhere in the US where Spanish is widely spoken? I feel like it's a terrific thing to know and he will be fine.
My other kid is still in high school but also likely to be a non-stem major - could be political or science or the like - I'm sure there will be jobs for that too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi! Just curious if you were any of the above majors, could you tell me what you do now. Or if your child is studying any of the above things, what do you think they will do with it.
DD simply arbors math, physics and thinks she hates any kind of science. Sad, she had a really lousy biology teacher freshman year at her school and is so turned off. Whatever.
Doesn’t want to be a lawyer, teacher, or librarian. Teachers are so horribly treated theses days and I am a librarian and they finish lowest on the totem pole in my federal agency. Unappreciated and underpaid.
I am asking because we are trying to choose colleges that might have additional areas that she can minor in to make such a degree more marketable.
Wish I had a stem kid. But I don’t! Sweet kid. NO STEM.
So.... that's truly terrible
I majored in philosophy, then worked at an investment bank, then got my master's, now work in consulting. Not from a T25 or highly regarded SLAC.
Humanities/social science majors pose no issue in job security for a student that is adept at representing themselves/communicating well.
Anonymous wrote:I majored in English. Currently SAHM, previously was doing the attorney thing, in a not-prestigious job.
DH majored in a foreign language, now a big law partner.
So many liberal arts majors go the attorney route, but I’d advise against that unless you get a sense for what it’s actually like to be an attorney. I wasn’t really cut out for it (though I did fine), but DH actually likes his job. Plus there are so many different kinds of attorneys and everyday life is different for all of them.
The advice I plan on giving my kids is 1) don’t go into lots of debt for a liberal arts degree 2) keep in mind that there are so, so many different kinds of jobs out there that you probably have never heard of. I think the most important things are building connections in a way that suits your personality and being open to new opportunities. I wouldn’t worry too much about a major yet. After all, lots of liberal arts majors go into tech. You don’t actually need a ton of STEM classes to do many of those jobs well.

Anonymous wrote:Hi! Just curious if you were any of the above majors, could you tell me what you do now. Or if your child is studying any of the above things, what do you think they will do with it.
DD simply arbors math, physics and thinks she hates any kind of science. Sad, she had a really lousy biology teacher freshman year at her school and is so turned off. Whatever.
Doesn’t want to be a lawyer, teacher, or librarian. Teachers are so horribly treated theses days and I am a librarian and they finish lowest on the totem pole in my federal agency. Unappreciated and underpaid.
I am asking because we are trying to choose colleges that might have additional areas that she can minor in to make such a degree more marketable.
Wish I had a stem kid. But I don’t! Sweet kid. NO STEM.