Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know women’s studies, studio art, and political science majors from my LAC, who went to medical school.
3% of med school students were/are humanities majors
It’s safe to say nobody knows many English majors who became doctors because it’s statistically impossible.
But you may know some.
Statistically if you know 33 doctors one of them majored in humanities. To know two you need to know 67 doctors. To know “a few” or you need to know hundreds of doctors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Current English major and although I do get bored with Victorian novels I can’t imagine studying anything else. I have a plan of what I want to do and I’m happy. My major has set me back pre-professionally (no good internships), but I love writing and that’s what I want to work on. I also want to work on my critical thinking skills. I’m going into debt, but at least I’ve learned things I never thought I’d learn.Would I prefer a major that was better suited to my career? Maybe! But, I won’t have this level of learning and exploring again so I’ll use college for that.
How do you expect to pay your debts off? Hoping for another D potus who will have taxpayers pay off your debt?
Also, there are many many majors you can study that teach critical thinking skills, and where you will be able to get a decent paying job and not expect taxpayers to foot your bill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Current English major and although I do get bored with Victorian novels I can’t imagine studying anything else. I have a plan of what I want to do and I’m happy. My major has set me back pre-professionally (no good internships), but I love writing and that’s what I want to work on. I also want to work on my critical thinking skills. I’m going into debt, but at least I’ve learned things I never thought I’d learn.Would I prefer a major that was better suited to my career? Maybe! But, I won’t have this level of learning and exploring again so I’ll use college for that.
How do you expect to pay your debts off? Hoping for another D potus who will have taxpayers pay off your debt?
Also, there are many many majors you can study that teach critical thinking skills, and where you will be able to get a decent paying job and not expect taxpayers to foot your bill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Current English major and although I do get bored with Victorian novels I can’t imagine studying anything else. I have a plan of what I want to do and I’m happy. My major has set me back pre-professionally (no good internships), but I love writing and that’s what I want to work on. I also want to work on my critical thinking skills. I’m going into debt, but at least I’ve learned things I never thought I’d learn.Would I prefer a major that was better suited to my career? Maybe! But, I won’t have this level of learning and exploring again so I’ll use college for that.
How do you expect to pay your debts off? Hoping for another D potus who will have taxpayers pay off your debt?
Also, there are many many majors you can study that teach critical thinking skills, and where you will be able to get a decent paying job and not expect taxpayers to foot your bill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:dony898 wrote:Everyone dunks on English majors until they need help writing a single coherent sentence on LinkedIn.
I have nothing but respect for English and history majors, but writing a single coherent sentence on LinkedIn is a perfect example of what ChatGPT is good for.
If someone needs a little help because they have no idea how to write, then maybe. But if they truly want to write well, even on LinkedIn, then ChatGPT isn’t quite enough.
People really need to stop commenting on ChatGPT if you don’t really understand how to use it.
Stanford trained chatGPT 3 (a paid version but a year old) on its best college essays and then had it write new ones to answer the prompts.
AOs said it produced essays in the top 1% of all essays.
So if you are using a free version of chatGPT and have no idea how to train it, then results won’t be great. However if you are willing to shell out a couple of bucks and know how to prompt it, it can produce very good tom excellent work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because we are living in a minor dark age.
oh yes, the age of space travel is such a dark age.![]()
This statement is quite illustrative, embodying the idea that technology cannot create darkness. Asinine.
I sure hope it’s a minor dark age. We’ve become unmoored from ethics, rule of law, and basic compassion. Ignorance and stupidity are celebrated. We’re in an anti-intellectual age of unreason, ruled by idiot-savant tech billionaires.
If AI ever does reach the point of singularity, we’re pretty likely to be wiped out.
Not at all sure it’s a minor dark age. I think we could have a cataclysmic event in the next 50 years that eliminates most humans. So do the technophiles, which is why they’re busy trying to find a way to populate space and constructing bunkers in New Zealand.
Anonymous wrote:Current English major and although I do get bored with Victorian novels I can’t imagine studying anything else. I have a plan of what I want to do and I’m happy. My major has set me back pre-professionally (no good internships), but I love writing and that’s what I want to work on. I also want to work on my critical thinking skills. I’m going into debt, but at least I’ve learned things I never thought I’d learn.Would I prefer a major that was better suited to my career? Maybe! But, I won’t have this level of learning and exploring again so I’ll use college for that.
Anonymous wrote:Current English major and although I do get bored with Victorian novels I can’t imagine studying anything else. I have a plan of what I want to do and I’m happy. My major has set me back pre-professionally (no good internships), but I love writing and that’s what I want to work on. I also want to work on my critical thinking skills. I’m going into debt, but at least I’ve learned things I never thought I’d learn.Would I prefer a major that was better suited to my career? Maybe! But, I won’t have this level of learning and exploring again so I’ll use college for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:dony898 wrote:Everyone dunks on English majors until they need help writing a single coherent sentence on LinkedIn.
I have nothing but respect for English and history majors, but writing a single coherent sentence on LinkedIn is a perfect example of what ChatGPT is good for.
If someone needs a little help because they have no idea how to write, then maybe. But if they truly want to write well, even on LinkedIn, then ChatGPT isn’t quite enough.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe it depends where you complete your degree? I did mine at Princeton and it was no joke and set me up for success (I’ve gotten jobs and opportunities with my writing skills that I wouldn’t have otherwise).