Anonymous wrote:Is she at an Ivy/SLAC where the prestige of the degree can carry her as a Liberal Arts generalist?
Does she write well?
Does she know how to operate websites and social media?
I would try advertising and communications specialties if she has good skills in these areas. Possibly work with a gallerist if she can live in a city that offers some of those jobs.
If you search "Art History" on this site, you will find threads where people argue over whether kids should get these degrees. In these threads, people who are pro-Art History give examples of possible jobs.
Is there any chance she could take additional education and become a secondary school history teacher?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was an art history major in the 80's. The breadth of knowledge I gained from that major is incomparable-history, politics, religion, civilizations, etc. I can answer over 80% of Jeopardy clues. I'm also a great conversationalist and can discuss a wide range of topics due to my education. Don't knock it.
2000s AH major here. I'm a champion conversationalist and am our firm's fixer to schmooze clients. I joke I majored in cocktail party.
You're probably this way naturally. Your major had nothing to do with it. You could've majored in English, Bio, and you'd still be a schmoozer and slick salesman.
Which means that they got to enjoy majoring in AH because that was the right way for them to succeed in college and earn a BA. Nothing at all wrong with that!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was an art history major in the 80's. The breadth of knowledge I gained from that major is incomparable-history, politics, religion, civilizations, etc. I can answer over 80% of Jeopardy clues. I'm also a great conversationalist and can discuss a wide range of topics due to my education. Don't knock it.
2000s AH major here. I'm a champion conversationalist and am our firm's fixer to schmooze clients. I joke I majored in cocktail party.
You're probably this way naturally. Your major had nothing to do with it. You could've majored in English, Bio, and you'd still be a schmoozer and slick salesman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was an art history major in the 80's. The breadth of knowledge I gained from that major is incomparable-history, politics, religion, civilizations, etc. I can answer over 80% of Jeopardy clues. I'm also a great conversationalist and can discuss a wide range of topics due to my education. Don't knock it.
You would make a conversationalist, no doubt, but most art history majors aren't getting a good paying job without a graduate degree, which means spending more money.
Art History phds, along with most other humanities and scientific phds, do not pay for grad school for the most part. PhD programs support the students with tuition remission and teaching stipends. It is certainly not a lot, between 30-40k a year, but you can live on it and you make further connections in grad school and gain experience teaching. I also did museum internships while in grad school.
My kid’s grad school stipend is only $24K (and her rent share is $1200 a month! 😳)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was an art history major in the 80's. The breadth of knowledge I gained from that major is incomparable-history, politics, religion, civilizations, etc. I can answer over 80% of Jeopardy clues. I'm also a great conversationalist and can discuss a wide range of topics due to my education. Don't knock it.
You would make a conversationalist, no doubt, but most art history majors aren't getting a good paying job without a graduate degree, which means spending more money.
Art History phds, along with most other humanities and scientific phds, do not pay for grad school for the most part. PhD programs support the students with tuition remission and teaching stipends. It is certainly not a lot, between 30-40k a year, but you can live on it and you make further connections in grad school and gain experience teaching. I also did museum internships while in grad school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter changed her major without telling us, she changed her major back 2 years ago. We never emailed the dean or anyone at the school because she was getting good grades and everything was going well. Now she is telling us in May she will be graduating in a degree in Art History, and she learned on Google that she might be able to get a job working as a Subway... What jobs can someone with a Art History BS get?
Totally depends on the school
Yale Art History could probably get a job at Subway
Or at Sotheby's
Completely depends on the connections.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was an art history major in the 80's. The breadth of knowledge I gained from that major is incomparable-history, politics, religion, civilizations, etc. I can answer over 80% of Jeopardy clues. I'm also a great conversationalist and can discuss a wide range of topics due to my education. Don't knock it.
2000s AH major here. I'm a champion conversationalist and am our firm's fixer to schmooze clients. I joke I majored in cocktail party.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was an art history major in the 80's. The breadth of knowledge I gained from that major is incomparable-history, politics, religion, civilizations, etc. I can answer over 80% of Jeopardy clues. I'm also a great conversationalist and can discuss a wide range of topics due to my education. Don't knock it.
2000s AH major here. I'm a champion conversationalist and am our firm's fixer to schmooze clients. I joke I majored in cocktail party.
Anonymous wrote:I was an art history major in the 80's. The breadth of knowledge I gained from that major is incomparable-history, politics, religion, civilizations, etc. I can answer over 80% of Jeopardy clues. I'm also a great conversationalist and can discuss a wide range of topics due to my education. Don't knock it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big 3 consultant but you have network.
Likely too late for this if the student is graduating in May. Recruiting for most consulting, finance programs, etc. is probably over. That being said, it doesn’t hurt to sift through LinkedIn and other job boards to see if openings remain.