Anonymous wrote:I teach (in a totally different subject) at a school that offers a lot of these majors, and actually, these specific majors are really tapped into local/regional hiring contacts, which is kind of the goal after college, right?
As for the MBA right after school, yeah, I agree with you. Work first for a MBA that employers will recognize as really attractive.
Anonymous wrote:Off the top of my head, I can think of multiple schools that offer 4+1 MBA programs (right after undergrad!!). Then, there’s stand-alone majors offered at many schools like criminology, cybersecurity, criminal justice, entrepreneurship, pharmacology, and insurance.
Go back to the basics, people.
Anonymous wrote:As my father once told me, if the major isn’t offered at Harvard, don’t major in it anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Off the top of my head, I can think of multiple schools that offer 4+1 MBA programs (right after undergrad!!). Then, there’s stand-alone majors offered at many schools like criminology, cybersecurity, criminal justice, entrepreneurship, pharmacology, and insurance.
Go back to the basics, people.
I think you're in the extreme minority on this -- many of those you named are extremely valuable to have, both in terms of income and importance to the country.
OP here. I consider liberal arts degrees in subjects like history, English, psychology, mathematics , biology etc to be useful.
Yeah, fine -- but you said those others you named are "useless." I consider that pretty ill-informed.
Anonymous wrote:Sports management is a popular one![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh come on. Most people on here would never let their kids major in these.
I'd be pretty proud if my kid went to St Louis for Pharmacy
Anonymous wrote:Oh come on. Most people on here would never let their kids major in these.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Off the top of my head, I can think of multiple schools that offer 4+1 MBA programs (right after undergrad!!). Then, there’s stand-alone majors offered at many schools like criminology, cybersecurity, criminal justice, entrepreneurship, pharmacology, and insurance.
Go back to the basics, people.
That's how colleges and universities make money from people who don't know what they are doing, but whose parents say they have to major in something "practical."
It's better to major in something that won't date as quickly (English, Mathematics, Economics, History) but you will make less in short run and more in the long run.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Off the top of my head, I can think of multiple schools that offer 4+1 MBA programs (right after undergrad!!). Then, there’s stand-alone majors offered at many schools like criminology, cybersecurity, criminal justice, entrepreneurship, pharmacology, and insurance.
Go back to the basics, people.
So you don't think getting training in how to parry hackers, or how to conduct secure servers is important?
Anonymous wrote:Off the top of my head, I can think of multiple schools that offer 4+1 MBA programs (right after undergrad!!). Then, there’s stand-alone majors offered at many schools like criminology, cybersecurity, criminal justice, entrepreneurship, pharmacology, and insurance.
Go back to the basics, people.