Anonymous wrote:How much do people coming out of a good IR program like say WM make a year? What do they do except gov work? are these jobs tied to DC?
Anonymous wrote:I'm going to take a contrary view to all the quant boosters on this thread, some of whom are wildly overstating how relevant a few stats or econ classes will be. Here are my bonafides: I have an undergrad degree in IR and a PhD from a professional school of IR. I've worked in government and the private sector and think tanks. In my current role I hire entry level staff (as well as more senior people) who are pursuing careers in international affairs.
Fwiw, quantitative skills and training are absolutely essential for any polisci/IR PhD program or academic career today. And they can be useful for early career hiring or finding a place in a competitive marketplace. But most entry-level jobs related to IR are not going to require econ or statistics, and as a minor or a concentration within an IR or polisci degree, a handful of undergraduate stats or econ classes aren't going to be a ticket to a first job or a high-paying career. Few employers will look at undergrad transcripts as part of the hiring process. If stats or math classes are going to bring down the GPA, I doubt it's worth the tradeoff.
Most entry-level jobs related to IR will be highly generalist; the most important skills will be basic stuff, like attention to detail, follow-through, timeliness, and strong writing skills. Serious language skills, esp in critical languages, will be a big asset - but that means real proficiency. Depending on what your kid is interested in doing, internships are going to be a big boost to finding a first job. That first job should hopefully give him or her a good basis for figuring out how to become competitive for the next jobs. Networking is essential. Eventually they will need some kind of graduate degree - can be an IR MA or a policy MPP, JD or MBA, or other pathways.
If your kid wants to do some math, by all means they should do it - but don't sentence your kids to a lot of quantitative coursework under the illusion that it will somehow catapult them into a more successful/more lucrative career path straight out of undergrad.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting to me that you as a lawyer don’t know anyone who had a political science major. I was a political science major and half my classmates are now lawyers.
(I took a real turn to tech that didn’t exist when I was in college)
Anonymous wrote:I have an IR major at WM. She is required to take 5 Econ classes to get an IR degree: macro, micro, intermediate and advanced macro OR intro and advanced micro and comparative econ. Plus, research methods is also required. The Econ classes, in turn, have required a semester of stats, and she also ended up retaking Calc to help with the advanced Econ. And somewhere in there a semester of data science, which was helpful, but not required. This isn’t to minor in Econ or get a leg up. In fact, her second major is a Critical foreign language. This is just to get a basic IR the degree. So, that’s 8-9 semesters of quant heavy class work for the major.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is a second year college student and recently declared an international relations major (I would not be surprised if he winds up switching to political science because of the IR language requirement, and their true interest is international politics which major doesn't exist at their college).
I'm a lawyer and spouse is an accountant, and we don't have friends in the fields that may spin from these majors (to be honest I'm not even exactly sure which jobs those may be, but I'm trusting that DC will figure it out with help from the college career center). But everything I read and hear is that strong quantitative skills are what even the social science fields are looking for these days. At DC's college, there are very little quantitative requirements to satisfy these majors - I think poli sci and IR eac require one research based class (which is incorporated into a topical class, not even research in of itself as a class), and IR also requires a basic econ class. That's it.
DS is actually strong in math, he just doesn't love it so isn't interest in taking the classes. We're going to encourage him to build strong quantitative skills to make himself in either of these majors more marketable, but neither spouse nor I are sure what to advise. An economics minor is very light in quant based classes. His college doesn't have a statistics minor. I don't think I could ever convince DS to consider a math or comp sci minor (he has very little comp sci skills).
For those of you hiring grads in the IR and poli sci fields (political risk analysts, whatever these jobs are), what do you look for with respect to quant skills in your applicants? Specific majors/minors (if so, which ones), or proficiency in certain coding, or what elseAlso, can these skills be acquired via taking certain classes you consider "musts" (e.g., econometrics) vs needing certain majors/minors.
Thanks for any advice. We are suggesting DC discuss more with his advisor, but he did when he declared the major and the adviser didn't seem focused on quant skills at all (maybe b/c they were educated at a different time, and are in academic vs professional world?).
Your kid is gonna be going up against people who are graduating from programs like this:
https://sfs.georgetown.edu/academics/undergraduate/majors/ipol/
I would suggest your kid to major in econ and NOT polisci
IR/Polisci is not for lower tier school kids
I do appreciate everyone’s candor. I am a little thrown for DS’s sake of statements like these, I admit. DS is at a fine college but not Georgetown level, but wouldn’t he competing for jobs against Georgetown students no matter what his major is? Is your point that IR and poli sci are “soft” majors so where you got the degree matters more versus if he majored in comp sci anywhere? That’s disappointing to hear.
PS - Reading that SFS page, the IR major (whatever they call it) seems very pre-professional there (eg, they learn to write white papers and memos), and it definitely is not at DS’s college.
- OP
Anonymous wrote:I have an IR major at WM. She is required to take 5 Econ classes to get an IR degree: macro, micro, intermediate and advanced macro OR intro and advanced micro and comparative econ. Plus, research methods is also required. The Econ classes, in turn, have required a semester of stats, and she also ended up retaking Calc to help with the advanced Econ. And somewhere in there a semester of data science, which was helpful, but not required. This isn’t to minor in Econ or get a leg up. In fact, her second major is a Critical foreign language. This is just to get a basic IR the degree. So, that’s 8-9 semesters of quant heavy class work for the major.