Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just to clarify, I'm not asking if someone can get a GOOD job with a CS minor. Just something better than one could get with just a liberal arts degree. Basically I'm wondering if a CS minor could be a bit of insurance for someone who wants to major in the liberal arts.
I was wondering if you are an idiot but now I’m sure.
Because no one worries about their kid getting a liberal arts degree.
I cannot tell if you are being sarcastic, but I have two kids getting liberal arts degrees, and I hold one myself, and no, I'm not worried at all. Why would I be?
Anonymous wrote:I majored in sociology. I worked for a temp agency for a while, got married, had two kids and now I work full time as a preschool teacher for 40k and I’m stuck. I don’t make enough to pay for grad school, or even tech school. This is what I will likely be doing until I retire.
I told my kids that their major for their bachelors degree should have a clear path to a worthwhile career. Accounting, IT, statistics, journalism, engineering, economics, etc.
If you major in things like history, biology, poly sci...you’re going to need at least a masters to start a genuine career path.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just to clarify, I'm not asking if someone can get a GOOD job with a CS minor. Just something better than one could get with just a liberal arts degree. Basically I'm wondering if a CS minor could be a bit of insurance for someone who wants to major in the liberal arts.
I was wondering if you are an idiot but now I’m sure.
Because no one worries about their kid getting a liberal arts degree.
I cannot tell if you are being sarcastic, but I have two kids getting liberal arts degrees, and I hold one myself, and no, I'm not worried at all. Why would I be?
Well your kids are graduating during a great job market, and maybe you went to a top school, had contacts, or were an academic super star. But your run of the mill liberal arts grad from average state U, who doesn't have the good fortune of graduating during a fantastic economy has something to be concerned about.
Anonymous wrote:Just to clarify, I'm not asking if someone can get a GOOD job with a CS minor. Just something better than one could get with just a liberal arts degree. Basically I'm wondering if a CS minor could be a bit of insurance for someone who wants to major in the liberal arts.
Anonymous wrote:I majored in sociology. I worked for a temp agency for a while, got married, had two kids and now I work full time as a preschool teacher for 40k and I’m stuck. I don’t make enough to pay for grad school, or even tech school. This is what I will likely be doing until I retire.
I told my kids that their major for their bachelors degree should have a clear path to a worthwhile career. Accounting, IT, statistics, journalism, engineering, economics, etc.
If you major in things like history, biology, poly sci...you’re going to need at least a masters to start a genuine career path.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just to clarify, I'm not asking if someone can get a GOOD job with a CS minor. Just something better than one could get with just a liberal arts degree. Basically I'm wondering if a CS minor could be a bit of insurance for someone who wants to major in the liberal arts.
I was wondering if you are an idiot but now I’m sure.
Because no one worries about their kid getting a liberal arts degree.
I cannot tell if you are being sarcastic, but I have two kids getting liberal arts degrees, and I hold one myself, and no, I'm not worried at all. Why would I be?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just to clarify, I'm not asking if someone can get a GOOD job with a CS minor. Just something better than one could get with just a liberal arts degree. Basically I'm wondering if a CS minor could be a bit of insurance for someone who wants to major in the liberal arts.
I was wondering if you are an idiot but now I’m sure.
Because no one worries about their kid getting a liberal arts degree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you pair it with a Statistics or data science major, you’re golden. If you pair it with something like Psychology or History, it’s worthless.
Is it totally worthless though? Obviously, you wouldn't get the same jobs as a Computer Science major, but I figure you could get some sort of job. I don't think it would be as worthless as a Psychology or History degree alone.
I am going to post this every time someone spouts nonsense about useless LA degrees.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.forbes.com/sites/dereknewton/2018/05/31/its-not-liberal-arts-and-literature-majors-who-are-most-underemployed/amp/
I just don't understand what people like to repeat unsubstantiated and untrue claims all the time as fact
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just to clarify, I'm not asking if someone can get a GOOD job with a CS minor. Just something better than one could get with just a liberal arts degree. Basically I'm wondering if a CS minor could be a bit of insurance for someone who wants to major in the liberal arts.
I was wondering if you are an idiot but now I’m sure.
Anonymous wrote:Just to clarify, I'm not asking if someone can get a GOOD job with a CS minor. Just something better than one could get with just a liberal arts degree. Basically I'm wondering if a CS minor could be a bit of insurance for someone who wants to major in the liberal arts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you pair it with a Statistics or data science major, you’re golden. If you pair it with something like Psychology or History, it’s worthless.
Is it totally worthless though? Obviously, you wouldn't get the same jobs as a Computer Science major, but I figure you could get some sort of job. I don't think it would be as worthless as a Psychology or History degree alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case anyone hasn't figured this out yet, I'm worried that my child is going to end up with a worthless liberal arts degree and am hoping that a CS minor will provide her with enough to get a job that pays the bills in case she can't find anything related to her major.
she will be fine. Consulting companies loves liberal arts majors. If you are still worried about her have her focus on tech writing. That opens up all sorts of jobs. Here in DC proposal support, and PM type jobs love this skill.