Anonymous wrote:DH: engineering major works as an engineer
Me: Economic/statistics major worked as a healthcare underwriter, now SAHP
Kids are in HS
DS1: currently applying to engineering schools
DS2: science leans towards physics and biology/ecology trying to find a major that incorporates both, does well in chemistry but it doesn't float his boat
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was not a statistics, sociology, psychology, or philisophy major.
Can someone digest all of the prior posts and let me know if there are any patterns or fundamental truths emerging?
one truth - at one time you could get a liberal arts degree and then pursue a JD and you'd be ok. Try that now and you'd be shit out of luck...
Yep -- how many of us erstwhile English/History/Government majors now practicing law are encouraging our kids to go to law school? Not many, I'll bet -- or at least not many of us whose children have any affinity for STEM fields.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was not a statistics, sociology, psychology, or philisophy major.
Can someone digest all of the prior posts and let me know if there are any patterns or fundamental truths emerging?
one truth - at one time you could get a liberal arts degree and then pursue a JD and you'd be ok. Try that now and you'd be shit out of luck...
Anonymous wrote:I was not a statistics, sociology, psychology, or philisophy major.
Can someone digest all of the prior posts and let me know if there are any patterns or fundamental truths emerging?
Anonymous wrote:I know, basically 3 questions for the price of one . . . just engaged in a dialogue with DC, DH, and others about prospective college majors, and I am curious about the answers to the above.
Anonymous wrote:OP, if your objective is to see whether the majors of parents and their current occupations offer any sort of guidance as to the prospects for majors children choose, there is a fundamental flaw in your approach.
Basically, with the changing job environment, certain majors that may have been viable in terms of job prospects in years gone by may have limited prospects today.