Anonymous wrote:By the time your child is going to college, it's too late for these kinds of lessons. Were you the kind of parent who rewarded a child for grades? If so, then what they learned is that the grade is important, not the effort or the interest in the material.
You lost me with your nasty reference. Classless. Maybe you should learn how to voice your opinion as a thoughtful adult whether you agree or disagree. You sound young, very.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For your children's sake, drop the criticism and be supportive. Sure, maybe she's unemployed because she majored in sociology, but she also might be unemployed because a lot of recent grads are unemployed -- it's a terrible job market for them. Here is a recent study showing that: https://www.cgsnet.org/ckfinder/userfiles/files/Unemployment_Final_update1.pdf
It shows for instance that yes recent humanities grads have a 9.4% unemployment rate, but even computer and math majors have an 8.2% unemployment rate. It sucks for everyone right now. And the lowest unemployment rate among recent grads isn't engineering or accounting or whatever -- it's teaching.
+1. Land your bitch helicopter. If you were my mom I'd hate you.
Anonymous wrote:Why not let your "weak-minded" child major in something easy? What is a "weak-minded" child anyway? If she isn't all that smart, then she needs something easy to study. Let her do what makes her happy. So what if she ends up as a preschool teacher making barely above minimum wage. If she's happy, so what? Maybe her life's ambition is to be assistant manager at Olive Garden. What's wrong with that? She won't be rich, but who are you to decide what's best for her, especially if she's not so smart, and you are. Your decision-making for her isn't going to make her any smarter. Let her be who she's going to be.
Anonymous wrote:My degrees are in English. I make $110K a year, work from home often, have a gorgeous office, and leave every day at 4:30. I love my work.
Pity me for my useless degree!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For your children's sake, drop the criticism and be supportive. Sure, maybe she's unemployed because she majored in sociology, but she also might be unemployed because a lot of recent grads are unemployed -- it's a terrible job market for them. Here is a recent study showing that: https://www.cgsnet.org/ckfinder/userfiles/files/Unemployment_Final_update1.pdf
It shows for instance that yes recent humanities grads have a 9.4% unemployment rate, but even computer and math majors have an 8.2% unemployment rate. It sucks for everyone right now. And the lowest unemployment rate among recent grads isn't engineering or accounting or whatever -- it's teaching.
+1. Land your bitch helicopter. If you were my mom I'd hate you.
Anonymous wrote:For your children's sake, drop the criticism and be supportive. Sure, maybe she's unemployed because she majored in sociology, but she also might be unemployed because a lot of recent grads are unemployed -- it's a terrible job market for them. Here is a recent study showing that: https://www.cgsnet.org/ckfinder/userfiles/files/Unemployment_Final_update1.pdf
It shows for instance that yes recent humanities grads have a 9.4% unemployment rate, but even computer and math majors have an 8.2% unemployment rate. It sucks for everyone right now. And the lowest unemployment rate among recent grads isn't engineering or accounting or whatever -- it's teaching.
Anonymous wrote:It does not matter one whit what your child majors in. She/he can get a job in business just as easily with a major in sociology, as long as she knows how to write well and presents herself maturely and professionally.