Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Physics majors are very employable in the current environment. Wall Street, defense, aerospace, the intelligence community, Silicon Valley… the list goes on. Physics majors tend to have the deepest quantitative skills of any major. The kind of math and computer science used in physics lends itself to the more intellectually complex algorithms in machine learning. A BS in physics can typically lead to multiple job offers.
This sounds completely made up. The engineers at my undergrad took more math classes, progressing further, than the physics majors.
Physics majors will also be paid less than a student with an engineering degree.
It's common for physics majors to delve into math subjects like real analysis and Lie algebra. Did your engineering friends take these?
Anonymous wrote:Physics majors are very employable in the current environment. Wall Street, defense, aerospace, the intelligence community, Silicon Valley… the list goes on. Physics majors tend to have the deepest quantitative skills of any major. The kind of math and computer science used in physics lends itself to the more intellectually complex algorithms in machine learning. A BS in physics can typically lead to multiple job offers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Physics majors are very employable in the current environment. Wall Street, defense, aerospace, the intelligence community, Silicon Valley… the list goes on. Physics majors tend to have the deepest quantitative skills of any major. The kind of math and computer science used in physics lends itself to the more intellectually complex algorithms in machine learning. A BS in physics can typically lead to multiple job offers.
This sounds completely made up. The engineers at my undergrad took more math classes, progressing further, than the physics majors.
Physics majors will also be paid less than a student with an engineering degree.
It's common for physics majors to delve into math subjects like real analysis and Lie algebra. Did your engineering friends take these?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Student answers “engineering” whenever asked his preferred major, but I think it’s his default understanding of what one does if they’re good at math / physics. Can anyone suggest other majors such a student should consider?
If not yet a senior, student should be looking now for a summer internship with a local tech firm, a local givernment lab that includes engineering (e.g., NIST, ARL, NSWC), or a local tech-oriented contractor (e.g., Lockheed, Northrup Grumman).
How does one find these internships?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Physics majors are very employable in the current environment. Wall Street, defense, aerospace, the intelligence community, Silicon Valley… the list goes on. Physics majors tend to have the deepest quantitative skills of any major. The kind of math and computer science used in physics lends itself to the more intellectually complex algorithms in machine learning. A BS in physics can typically lead to multiple job offers.
This sounds completely made up. The engineers at my undergrad took more math classes, progressing further, than the physics majors.
Physics majors will also be paid less than a student with an engineering degree.
Anonymous wrote:Physics majors are very employable in the current environment. Wall Street, defense, aerospace, the intelligence community, Silicon Valley… the list goes on. Physics majors tend to have the deepest quantitative skills of any major. The kind of math and computer science used in physics lends itself to the more intellectually complex algorithms in machine learning. A BS in physics can typically lead to multiple job offers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Student answers “engineering” whenever asked his preferred major, but I think it’s his default understanding of what one does if they’re good at math / physics. Can anyone suggest other majors such a student should consider?
Radiologist
Tech consulting
General tech industry (physics major)
Innovation technology: start a company
Medical research (MDphD for the top)
Stem research and development (phD if you want to run the research)
Scientist in industry, midlevel(MS needed)
Professor
Quantitive finance
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Student answers “engineering” whenever asked his preferred major, but I think it’s his default understanding of what one does if they’re good at math / physics. Can anyone suggest other majors such a student should consider?
If not yet a senior, student should be looking now for a summer internship with a local tech firm, a local givernment lab that includes engineering (e.g., NIST, ARL, NSWC), or a local tech-oriented contractor (e.g., Lockheed, Northrup Grumman).
Anonymous wrote:My kid committed to a D3 with no engineering major. Plans to major in physics and then grad school in engineering.