Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting that criminology is one of the least regretted majors and sociology is one of the most regretted. Almost all of the criminology classes are sociology classes. A criminal justice degree is a waste of 150k because you don't need need the degree to get a job as a police officer. Furthermore, college doesn't give you any of the skills it takes to do the job, so big waste of time/energy/money.
No education is a waste. The belief that college is a trade school is a relic of lower and lower middle class origins of our immigrant forebears.
Sorry that made more sense when you didn’t graduate with 5-6 figure student debt and housing was affordable without a college degreed professional job.
Anonymous wrote:If they did this for graduate degrees, I bet law would be at the top.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting that criminology is one of the least regretted majors and sociology is one of the most regretted. Almost all of the criminology classes are sociology classes. A criminal justice degree is a waste of 150k because you don't need need the degree to get a job as a police officer. Furthermore, college doesn't give you any of the skills it takes to do the job, so big waste of time/energy/money.
No education is a waste. The belief that college is a trade school is a relic of lower and lower middle class origins of our immigrant forebears.
Sorry that made more sense when you didn’t graduate with 5-6 figure student debt and housing was affordable without a college degreed professional job.
Anonymous wrote:Given the percentage of people unhappy about majoring in education makes you wonder about the future of the teacher shortage.
Anonymous wrote:If they did this for graduate degrees, I bet law would be at the top.
Anonymous wrote:I don't regret my history or English lit degrees. I learned how to read critically, do research and evaluate sources, and how to write well. All skills that have served me well, plus I really enjoyed the subject matter. My sociologist spouse has no regrets, either. Understanding stats and surveys is also a useful skill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting that criminology is one of the least regretted majors and sociology is one of the most regretted. Almost all of the criminology classes are sociology classes. A criminal justice degree is a waste of 150k because you don't need need the degree to get a job as a police officer. Furthermore, college doesn't give you any of the skills it takes to do the job, so big waste of time/energy/money.
No education is a waste. The belief that college is a trade school is a relic of lower and lower middle class origins of our immigrant forebears.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting that criminology is one of the least regretted majors and sociology is one of the most regretted. Almost all of the criminology classes are sociology classes. A criminal justice degree is a waste of 150k because you don't need need the degree to get a job as a police officer. Furthermore, college doesn't give you any of the skills it takes to do the job, so big waste of time/energy/money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seeing these threads I always think that I would pay for any major but I would never pay for an HR degree or one on construction. I would pay for comms, poly sci, or history — all of which help you think critically and would better serve an HR professional than an HR degree.
I did not even realize you could get a degree in HR or construction. It surprised me to see that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seeing these threads I always think that I would pay for any major but I would never pay for an HR degree or one on construction. I would pay for comms, poly sci, or history — all of which help you think critically and would better serve an HR professional than an HR degree.
I did not even realize you could get a degree in HR or construction. It surprised me to see that.
Anonymous wrote:Seeing these threads I always think that I would pay for any major but I would never pay for an HR degree or one on construction. I would pay for comms, poly sci, or history — all of which help you think critically and would better serve an HR professional than an HR degree.