Anonymous wrote:Look at job placement statisitics for undergraduate business majors ---many have a job lined up before they graduate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at job placement statisitics for undergraduate business majors ---many have a job lined up before they graduate.
Yep. Until I see job postings seeking classics majors, I am skeptical of this article.
Classics majors are probably better prepared for the business world than business majors.
Good, but there are few job postings for classics majors.
So if a job ad doesn't mention X as a college major required for that job, then someone who majored in X won't be able to fill that job?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at job placement statisitics for undergraduate business majors ---many have a job lined up before they graduate.
Yep. Until I see job postings seeking classics majors, I am skeptical of this article.
Classics majors are probably better prepared for the business world than business majors.
Good, but there are few job postings for classics majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have 2 business degrees and I agree. Most skills can be learned on the job, I am encouraging my kids to major in other fields so they can learn how to think not just ace the exam.
Finance + a difficult humanities degree (classics, philosophy, linguistics, etc) is s great prep for banking, consulting, or law. IMHO.
Only if you go to an elite university (and usually come from an UMC family, with private or elite public high school; there's a reason why people list Palo Alto High on their LinkedIn profile)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have 2 business degrees and I agree. Most skills can be learned on the job, I am encouraging my kids to major in other fields so they can learn how to think not just ace the exam.
Finance + a difficult humanities degree (classics, philosophy, linguistics, etc) is s great prep for banking, consulting, or law. IMHO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at job placement statisitics for undergraduate business majors ---many have a job lined up before they graduate.
Yep. Until I see job postings seeking classics majors, I am skeptical of this article.
Classics majors are probably better prepared for the business world than business majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at job placement statisitics for undergraduate business majors ---many have a job lined up before they graduate.
Yep. Until I see job postings seeking classics majors, I am skeptical of this article.
Classics majors are probably better prepared for the business world than business majors.
ITA. We should see more job postings for Classics majors. They actually learn critical thinking skills, not just how to memorize facts for a test.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at job placement statisitics for undergraduate business majors ---many have a job lined up before they graduate.
Yep. Until I see job postings seeking classics majors, I am skeptical of this article.
Classics majors are probably better prepared for the business world than business majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at job placement statisitics for undergraduate business majors ---many have a job lined up before they graduate.
Yep. Until I see job postings seeking classics majors, I am skeptical of this article.
Classics majors are probably better prepared for the business world than business majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at job placement statisitics for undergraduate business majors ---many have a job lined up before they graduate.
Yep. Until I see job postings seeking classics majors, I am skeptical of this article.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have 2 business degrees and I agree. Most skills can be learned on the job, I am encouraging my kids to major in other fields so they can learn how to think not just ace the exam.
Finance + a difficult humanities degree (classics, philosophy, linguistics, etc) is s great prep for banking, consulting, or law. IMHO.
Anonymous wrote:I have 2 business degrees and I agree. Most skills can be learned on the job, I am encouraging my kids to major in other fields so they can learn how to think not just ace the exam.