Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You do not need a degree in CS to work in IT.
That’s why the market is saturated. Get a degree in finance so you can have a background in financial applications. Get a degree in English and do technical writing.
Get a degree in math and be an analyst or SME.
Not really. Majority of the IT jobs will have simple education requirement. BS in CS or Information Systems. Sometimes in Math. I work in large IT firm and the only times we’ll even consider interviewing someone with non tech degree is if they have years and years of experience. A degree in English will not help you in any way to become a technical writer. You would need to have deep technical knowledge of systems architecture, software design, information security, etc etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just returned from a college reunion, and my friends' kids who majored in CS and graduated last year and this year are all un- or under-employed. It seems pretty obvious to me that low-level CS jobs are the first to be gobbled up by AI. If you go to a top school, it truly does not matter what you major in. Most of those kids who want top jobs in tech, finance, consulting will get them. Majoring in something skill-based is more important if you attend even a slightly lower-ranked school. This is why people work so hard to secure spots in the Ivy-plus schools.
Most low level IT jobs have been offshored for a while. But, yea, most grads from T20 CS schools will be ok. Maybe not the $150K starting salary with $80K bonus, ok, but they will get something decent that pays more than most humanities majors.
CS majors are not applying for low level IT jobs. CS is not IT.
So, what are CS majors doing? What kind of jobs are CS majors getting?
I’d love to know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's why my kid is double majoring with math. Hoping for options...just in case.
My kid is also a double major in math and CS, but only because they love math. I don't think a math major in and of itself is lucrative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just returned from a college reunion, and my friends' kids who majored in CS and graduated last year and this year are all un- or under-employed. It seems pretty obvious to me that low-level CS jobs are the first to be gobbled up by AI. If you go to a top school, it truly does not matter what you major in. Most of those kids who want top jobs in tech, finance, consulting will get them. Majoring in something skill-based is more important if you attend even a slightly lower-ranked school. This is why people work so hard to secure spots in the Ivy-plus schools.
Most low level IT jobs have been offshored for a while. But, yea, most grads from T20 CS schools will be ok. Maybe not the $150K starting salary with $80K bonus, ok, but they will get something decent that pays more than most humanities majors.
CS majors are not applying for low level IT jobs. CS is not IT.
Anonymous wrote:You do not need a degree in CS to work in IT.
That’s why the market is saturated. Get a degree in finance so you can have a background in financial applications. Get a degree in English and do technical writing.
Get a degree in math and be an analyst or SME.
Anonymous wrote:CS + business = best results.
I got a BBA, then went back to school to study CS. That's when my salary sky rocketed.
I would advise do a Business degree with a CS minor, or vice versa.
Anonymous wrote:Just returned from a college reunion, and my friends' kids who majored in CS and graduated last year and this year are all un- or under-employed. It seems pretty obvious to me that low-level CS jobs are the first to be gobbled up by AI. If you go to a top school, it truly does not matter what you major in. Most of those kids who want top jobs in tech, finance, consulting will get them. Majoring in something skill-based is more important if you attend even a slightly lower-ranked school. This is why people work so hard to secure spots in the Ivy-plus schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a liberal arts degree (economics and something soft) from the highest ranked school you can.
Recruiting for finance, consulting, and corporate /strategy roles are much much easier if you are in English and economics major coming from Rice or Vanderbilt or Emory compared to CS at Purdue…..
Ask around people!!!
This. College is not trade school, despite the pervasive and lingering lower middle class belief to the contrary.
This is 2024, not 1954, despite how some elite people want to think it is. College is no longer about a liberal art education, and then get some job because you have a degree. That's 1954 thinking. This is not how it works today, in 2024.
As thé decades pass, the liberal arts majors will have a better understanding of the world and how it works that the person who is not interested in anything that isn’t tech or tech-related. The non liberal arts major won’t even realize what they can’t understand because of their lack of knowledge of history, arts, and humanities. Old age will be difficult for them because they just. won’t. get. it.
This is pure unadulterated nonsense.
STEM majors have 30% or more of their course work in history, arts and humanities in college. It is the humanities majors who end up having a very narrow education.
How many courses do you need in history, arts and humanities? Do you need to major in history to understand world history?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very soon the CS degree will be considered obsolete
+100
Anonymous wrote:what about electrical or mechanical engineering?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just returned from a college reunion, and my friends' kids who majored in CS and graduated last year and this year are all un- or under-employed. It seems pretty obvious to me that low-level CS jobs are the first to be gobbled up by AI. If you go to a top school, it truly does not matter what you major in. Most of those kids who want top jobs in tech, finance, consulting will get them. Majoring in something skill-based is more important if you attend even a slightly lower-ranked school. This is why people work so hard to secure spots in the Ivy-plus schools.
Again the data doesn't agree with your imagination.
Harvard english major 4 year out median salary = $49,675
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/school/?166027-Harvard-University&fos_code=2301&fos_credential=3
I have no doubt the average pay is lower. Many English majors want to go into lower paying fields like journalism, teaching, etc. But I guarantee you that English majors from Harvard who want to do into finance, tech, or consulting can do so pretty easily. I know plenty of kids from T20 schools who did.
This is absolutely not true when you look at the backgrounds of people working in finance, tech and consulting. It is dominated by quantitative majors, and it is absolutely not "easy" for a Harvard English major to get one of these jobs.
More accurately, a Harvard English major may have a 15% of getting one of those jobs while a UMD English Major probably has a less than 1% of getting such a job. Almost always even that English major had to take some real classes that proved their quantitative abilities (and likely a parent forced them to take so they may have a shot at a job).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a liberal arts degree (economics and something soft) from the highest ranked school you can.
Recruiting for finance, consulting, and corporate /strategy roles are much much easier if you are in English and economics major coming from Rice or Vanderbilt or Emory compared to CS at Purdue…..
Ask around people!!!
This. College is not trade school, despite the pervasive and lingering lower middle class belief to the contrary.
This is 2024, not 1954, despite how some elite people want to think it is. College is no longer about a liberal art education, and then get some job because you have a degree. That's 1954 thinking. This is not how it works today, in 2024.
As thé decades pass, the liberal arts majors will have a better understanding of the world and how it works that the person who is not interested in anything that isn’t tech or tech-related. The non liberal arts major won’t even realize what they can’t understand because of their lack of knowledge of history, arts, and humanities. Old age will be difficult for them because they just. won’t. get. it.
That's your imagination.
The employers who actually pay don't agree with your imagination.
The employers who pay are the ones matter.
You are entitled to your view as I am to mine.
Note my spouse and I both graduated with humanities majors from a T10 university.
Our combined annual income averages between $4.5-6million a year.
We are definitely not alone.
That much in income and you're on DCUM?
Yeah....right. And I'm Elon Musk.
You’d be surprised….and I’m not even in DC!
Why do people who don’t live in the dmv go on DCUM?
Better question, how many posters are in the DMV? I'll guess 1 in 4, tops.