Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol "oversubscribed" only the US would claim that it's possible to "oversubscribe" in math and science heavily fields that lead to high paying jobs.
If the point is high paying jobs, then of course it's possible to "oversubscribe," because too many people in the field will drive wages down.
Anonymous wrote:Lol "oversubscribed" only the US would claim that it's possible to "oversubscribe" in math and science heavily fields that lead to high paying jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as STEM majors lead to a profitable career, it will remain popular. Particularly for some demographics it will continue for a while.
+1. It’s about the jobs.
Yes. And the CS jobs are drying up.
My spouse was an Econ major and hired by a software consulting firm. Lead software specialist- led to starting own firm- expert in field. A lot of WS firms also hire history majors, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Lol "oversubscribed" only the US would claim that it's possible to "oversubscribe" in math and science heavily fields that lead to high paying jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as STEM majors lead to a profitable career, it will remain popular. Particularly for some demographics it will continue for a while.
+1. It’s about the jobs.
Your state doesn't require 4 years of english, US history, civics , world history to graduate?Anonymous wrote:Yes. Most HS now are mostly STEM-focused. There is a glut of kids that can’t write or read a novel or locate foreign countries on a map and are all one dimensional.
Anonymous wrote:Asking out of curiosity. Today’s students are choosing STEM majors at high rates compared to those in the humanities and social sciences. Will we continue to see this, say in 10 years, or will the preference shift to other areas?
Anonymous wrote:As long as STEM majors lead to a profitable career, it will remain popular.
Anonymous wrote:As long as STEM majors lead to a profitable career, it will remain popular. Particularly for some demographics it will continue for a while.