Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This topic always generates so many stupid comments and people who mistake snark for wit.
Seriously. My firm hires humanities majors all the time--French majors, history majors, philosophy majors, Russian lit majors. We want people who know how to think, reason, and communicate effectively. That's what I learned with my double(!) humanities major--and what I refined when I went back and got a graduate degree in literature. My career and salary have steadily progressed since I graduated in the mid-90s, and my current salary is the same as my husband's when he was counsel at a law firm.
Humanities majors have to write long, well-constructed, and confidently argued papers; they have to participate confidently in class discussions about complex topics. They hone skills that are valued in consulting, marketing, communications, and web strategy. Do you think Google is just a bunch of CS majors pumping out lines of code?
OP, I don't know what your major is, but if you're a good writer, I'd look for editorial jobs--web editor/producer, proposal writer, corporate communications copywriter, etc. Start there, learn a lot, then look for the next interesting thing. Build skills and look for new ways to apply them. Good luck!
I am sure your firm does hire them, depending completely on what school they went to and nothing to do with the major. Outside of attending a top school, and even then, a humanities major should plan on grad school.
Nope. We want to see a strong academic record, excellent communication skills, intellectual curiosity, and strong performance on the editorial and analytical reasoning exercises we have them complete as part of the interview process.
I oversee two departments of about 50 people total. I'd say that 75% of our hires in the last two years have been from non-"top-tier" schools. But they all had great records, and they all have humanities degrees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This topic always generates so many stupid comments and people who mistake snark for wit.
Seriously. My firm hires humanities majors all the time--French majors, history majors, philosophy majors, Russian lit majors. We want people who know how to think, reason, and communicate effectively. That's what I learned with my double(!) humanities major--and what I refined when I went back and got a graduate degree in literature. My career and salary have steadily progressed since I graduated in the mid-90s, and my current salary is the same as my husband's when he was counsel at a law firm.
Humanities majors have to write long, well-constructed, and confidently argued papers; they have to participate confidently in class discussions about complex topics. They hone skills that are valued in consulting, marketing, communications, and web strategy. Do you think Google is just a bunch of CS majors pumping out lines of code?
OP, I don't know what your major is, but if you're a good writer, I'd look for editorial jobs--web editor/producer, proposal writer, corporate communications copywriter, etc. Start there, learn a lot, then look for the next interesting thing. Build skills and look for new ways to apply them. Good luck!
I am sure your firm does hire them, depending completely on what school they went to and nothing to do with the major. Outside of attending a top school, and even then, a humanities major should plan on grad school.
Anonymous wrote:Anything dealing with old people. The elderly population is about to skyrocket.
Anonymous wrote:law will come back in few year... how about teaching?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This topic always generates so many stupid comments and people who mistake snark for wit.
Seriously. My firm hires humanities majors all the time--French majors, history majors, philosophy majors, Russian lit majors. We want people who know how to think, reason, and communicate effectively. That's what I learned with my double(!) humanities major--and what I refined when I went back and got a graduate degree in literature. My career and salary have steadily progressed since I graduated in the mid-90s, and my current salary is the same as my husband's when he was counsel at a law firm.
Humanities majors have to write long, well-constructed, and confidently argued papers; they have to participate confidently in class discussions about complex topics. They hone skills that are valued in consulting, marketing, communications, and web strategy. Do you think Google is just a bunch of CS majors pumping out lines of code?
OP, I don't know what your major is, but if you're a good writer, I'd look for editorial jobs--web editor/producer, proposal writer, corporate communications copywriter, etc. Start there, learn a lot, then look for the next interesting thing. Build skills and look for new ways to apply them. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This topic always generates so many stupid comments and people who mistake snark for wit.
Seriously. My firm hires humanities majors all the time--French majors, history majors, philosophy majors, Russian lit majors. We want people who know how to think, reason, and communicate effectively. That's what I learned with my double(!) humanities major--and what I refined when I went back and got a graduate degree in literature. My career and salary have steadily progressed since I graduated in the mid-90s, and my current salary is the same as my husband's when he was counsel at a law firm.
Humanities majors have to write long, well-constructed, and confidently argued papers; they have to participate confidently in class discussions about complex topics. They hone skills that are valued in consulting, marketing, communications, and web strategy. Do you think Google is just a bunch of CS majors pumping out lines of code?
OP, I don't know what your major is, but if you're a good writer, I'd look for editorial jobs--web editor/producer, proposal writer, corporate communications copywriter, etc. Start there, learn a lot, then look for the next interesting thing. Build skills and look for new ways to apply them. Good luck!
Agree with this. The problem with majoring in the humanities is not that you don't have the skills to get hired, it's that you have to figure out what it is you want to do which means networking and doing informational interviewing while you're in college.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This topic always generates so many stupid comments and people who mistake snark for wit.
Seriously. My firm hires humanities majors all the time--French majors, history majors, philosophy majors, Russian lit majors. We want people who know how to think, reason, and communicate effectively. That's what I learned with my double(!) humanities major--and what I refined when I went back and got a graduate degree in literature. My career and salary have steadily progressed since I graduated in the mid-90s, and my current salary is the same as my husband's when he was counsel at a law firm.
Humanities majors have to write long, well-constructed, and confidently argued papers; they have to participate confidently in class discussions about complex topics. They hone skills that are valued in consulting, marketing, communications, and web strategy. Do you think Google is just a bunch of CS majors pumping out lines of code?
OP, I don't know what your major is, but if you're a good writer, I'd look for editorial jobs--web editor/producer, proposal writer, corporate communications copywriter, etc. Start there, learn a lot, then look for the next interesting thing. Build skills and look for new ways to apply them. Good luck!
OP, I don't know what your major is, but if you're a good writer, I'd look for editorial jobs--web editor/producer, proposal writer, corporate communications copywriter, etc. Start there, learn a lot, then look for the next interesting thing. Build skills and look for new ways to apply them. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
This topic always generates so many stupid comments and people who mistake snark for wit.
Seriously. My firm hires humanities majors all the time--French majors, history majors, philosophy majors, Russian lit majors. We want people who know how to think, reason, and communicate effectively. That's what I learned with my double(!) humanities major--and what I refined when I went back and got a graduate degree in literature. My career and salary have steadily progressed since I graduated in the mid-90s, and my current salary is the same as my husband's when he was counsel at a law firm.
Humanities majors have to write long, well-constructed, and confidently argued papers; they have to particulates confidently in class discussions about complex topics. They hone skills that are valued in consulting, marketing, communications, and web strategy. Do you think Google is just a bunch of CS majors pumping out lines of code?
OP, I don't know what your major is, but if you're a good writer, I'd look for editorial jobs--web editor/producer, proposal writer, corporate communications copywriter, etc. Start there, learn a lot, then look for the next interesting thing. Build skills and look for new ways to apply them. Good luck!
Google doesn't employ many humanities majors. Only major in humanities if you attend a top school or have parents who know people and can get you a job after school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This topic always generates so many stupid comments and people who mistake snark for wit.
Seriously. My firm hires humanities majors all the time--French majors, history majors, philosophy majors, Russian lit majors. We want people who know how to think, reason, and communicate effectively. That's what I learned with my double(!) humanities major--and what I refined when I went back and got a graduate degree in literature. My career and salary have steadily progressed since I graduated in the mid-90s, and my current salary is the same as my husband's when he was counsel at a law firm.
Humanities majors have to write long, well-constructed, and confidently argued papers; they have to particulates confidently in class discussions about complex topics. They hone skills that are valued in consulting, marketing, communications, and web strategy. Do you think Google is just a bunch of CS majors pumping out lines of code?
OP, I don't know what your major is, but if you're a good writer, I'd look for editorial jobs--web editor/producer, proposal writer, corporate communications copywriter, etc. Start there, learn a lot, then look for the next interesting thing. Build skills and look for new ways to apply them. Good luck!
Google doesn't employ many humanities majors. Only major in humanities if you attend a top school or have parents who know people and can get you a job after school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This topic always generates so many stupid comments and people who mistake snark for wit.
Seriously. My firm hires humanities majors all the time--French majors, history majors, philosophy majors, Russian lit majors. We want people who know how to think, reason, and communicate effectively. That's what I learned with my double(!) humanities major--and what I refined when I went back and got a graduate degree in literature. My career and salary have steadily progressed since I graduated in the mid-90s, and my current salary is the same as my husband's when he was counsel at a law firm.
Humanities majors have to write long, well-constructed, and confidently argued papers; they have to particulates confidently in class discussions about complex topics. They hone skills that are valued in consulting, marketing, communications, and web strategy. Do you think Google is just a bunch of CS majors pumping out lines of code?
OP, I don't know what your major is, but if you're a good writer, I'd look for editorial jobs--web editor/producer, proposal writer, corporate communications copywriter, etc. Start there, learn a lot, then look for the next interesting thing. Build skills and look for new ways to apply them. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:This topic always generates so many stupid comments and people who mistake snark for wit.