Anonymous wrote:In the past it was the classic MRS degree. The communications majors seemed to be mostly very pretty girls with no specific career goal except maybe newscasting or other on-camera announcing jobs.
However, the world has caught up with the field and now there is much more to communications than TV and radio. I would say that it is a valid career field now when it wasn't 25 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:It is really stupid when people criticize one degree over another. I know people of all degree types who have done well and others have done poorly. It really depends on the person and the school as to how they "parlay" their degree into something. For example, I know communications degree people who work in the press, in social media, on Capitol Hill, on Wall Street, wherever. Others are waiting tables or working retail. People need to do internships in their area of expertise to make something of themselves and their degrees. Stop the hating/shaming.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone please define "communications" to me? It strikes me as similar to when someone is a "consultant", whatever the fuck that means besides "I hold a boring office job that requires basic literacy and generates no actual tangible anything but sounds like something real on LinkedIn."
Anonymous wrote:Because it's a mainly female major and any profession dominated by women gets degraded and viewed as less difficult/important- studies have been done that prove this.
Anonymous wrote:It's a good degree that gives you flexibility and freedom to chart your own path rather than be pigeon holed into whatever you were thinking of majoring in when you were 18 years old.