Anonymous wrote:https://www.bestcolleges.com/news/analysis/college-grads-regret-majoring-in-humanities-fields/
Lack of critical thinking in choosing a major which is a very important thing. They focused too much on 'college experience' was
Anonymous wrote:https://www.bestcolleges.com/news/analysis/college-grads-regret-majoring-in-humanities-fields/
Lack of critical thinking in choosing a major which is a very important thing. They focused too much on 'college experience' was
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.bestcolleges.com/news/analysis/college-grads-regret-majoring-in-humanities-fields/
Lack of critical thinking in choosing a major which is a very important thing. They focused too much on 'college experience' was
Humanities majors need to have a plan, more so than a traditional STEM major. They need to be proactive and find a path that interests them career wise. It is also beneficial if they add in a minor in business, data analytics, CS, math, really anything that will help them find direction and possible internships. They also need to realize that while they can make as much as STEM majors, it will take a few years to do that. Very few art history majors start out making $75K/year.
This. The pathways out of humanities are harder and many students don't have a good sense of what their career is supposed to look like. It's a bit of a black box.
I think many universities also do humanities students a disservice because many humanities departments treat academia as the default career path and it's very much not. There are many ways to use a history or English degree that don't involve graduate school or teaching. But you are unlikely to meet people working in your college major department who have a sense of what those uses might be.
Universities should be telling kids getting humanities degrees about this early on and part of getting a degree like this should actually include developing a career plan, and that career plan can also influence what classes you take, what minors or double majors you pursue, etc. We actually do need people who are experts in literature, history, political science, etc. Lots of jobs to be had. It's just very hard to know what they are when you spend 4 years mostly working with people who think the main option is "Professor of Humanities Subject" and not, like, doing historical documentation for a major corporation or training new hires on the internal writing style guide or whatever actual job with benefits these people are qualified to do.
Anonymous wrote:can we NOT have this discuss again? this was posted several weeks ago, we've already hashed it out ad nauseam.
I have to kids who are humanities majors, politics and anthropology. I was a humanities major (political science) and my DH was as well (english). in fact every other member of my side of the family, all humanities majors (math, econ, etc). Not every kid should be, or needs to be an engineering major people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, my kid doing a double major in STEM field and Foreign Language is a rare bird?
Kid has always been interested in both and did not want to choose one at the exclusion of the other.
Your kid is a STEM major.
Common.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.bestcolleges.com/news/analysis/college-grads-regret-majoring-in-humanities-fields/
Lack of critical thinking in choosing a major which is a very important thing. They focused too much on 'college experience' was
Humanities majors need to have a plan, more so than a traditional STEM major. They need to be proactive and find a path that interests them career wise. It is also beneficial if they add in a minor in business, data analytics, CS, math, really anything that will help them find direction and possible internships. They also need to realize that while they can make as much as STEM majors, it will take a few years to do that. Very few art history majors start out making $75K/year.
Anonymous wrote:So, my kid doing a double major in STEM field and Foreign Language is a rare bird?
Kid has always been interested in both and did not want to choose one at the exclusion of the other.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.bestcolleges.com/news/analysis/college-grads-regret-majoring-in-humanities-fields/
Lack of critical thinking in choosing a major which is a very important thing. They focused too much on 'college experience' was
Anonymous wrote:So, my kid doing a double major in STEM field and Foreign Language is a rare bird?
Kid has always been interested in both and did not want to choose one at the exclusion of the other.