Anonymous wrote:Kinesiology leaves you pretty much a gym teacher, personal trainer, or in prep for ... something somewhat related.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of kinesiology majors go to Physical therapy school.
Or become personal trainers.
I know one who sent to med school and is now a pediatrician.
Isn’t how the human body works a little bit important?
If you don’t like it, don’t study it.
+1
Kinesiology major is an excellent precursor for PT school. However, if you don't go onto PT/OT/Med school, it is not a very useful major. The jobs you will get will be low paying and often you could have gotten there with "training" not a 4 year degree. But it is an excellent degree for pre-PT/Med
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fifty years ago, University of Maryland, College Park, had a "College of Human Ecology"? That was a euphemism for "Home Economics". They still have Family Science and Kinesiology majors in the School of Public Health. Other universities have them too.
HYP schools do not offer these majors. IMO, those majors are not appropriate in a publicly subsidized institution of higher learning. You could split hairs about overlap among humanities departments, or criticize vocational aspects of business education. But Home Ec and Kinesiology not fundamental scholarly disciplines. Why the hell do we even have them in universities?
Every school should have these as mandatory courses for both genders just like they should make it mandatory to learn CPR, wound dressing, diet balance, taxes, tire change etc.
Anonymous wrote:Fifty years ago, University of Maryland, College Park, had a "College of Human Ecology"? That was a euphemism for "Home Economics". They still have Family Science and Kinesiology majors in the School of Public Health. Other universities have them too.
HYP schools do not offer these majors. IMO, those majors are not appropriate in a publicly subsidized institution of higher learning. You could split hairs about overlap among humanities departments, or criticize vocational aspects of business education. But Home Ec and Kinesiology not fundamental scholarly disciplines. Why the hell do we even have them in universities?
Anonymous wrote:Having a college degree is always better.
No matter what you do. Told my kids they can be anything. Be a plumber, tradesmen, artist, anything. But first you get your college degree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How would you think kinesiology is not an academic pursuit? What?? The human body is very complex.
But what do you do with that degree?
I know someone that majored in kinesiology from UofM. They had a hard time finding a job, any job. Eventually they went back to school and studied something else. Kinesiology leaves you pretty much a gym teacher, personal trainer, or in prep for getting a masters degree in something somewhat related: PA school, OT, PT
Best person used for painful PT told me their best background for current job was their kinesiology major and for that I am beyond thankful. And why is being gym teacher or trainer being written above as bad?
Anonymous wrote:A lot of kinesiology majors go to Physical therapy school.
Or become personal trainers.
I know one who sent to med school and is now a pediatrician.
Isn’t how the human body works a little bit important?
If you don’t like it, don’t study it.
Anonymous wrote:Our state universities should be training out citizens to be productive members of society, not ivory tower nonsense.