Anonymous wrote:Perhaps folks didn't read the article. There is a throwaway line:
"To be sure, comp-sci majors from top-tier schools can still get jobs."
The article also goes on to state that many IT departments of non-tech companies are hiring lots of kids.
Unfortunately, the example kid they give of a CS degree from Catholic is the same story as told about every major since they started writing these articles about every major.
A CS degree from Catholic isn't the same as a CS degree from UMD. Much like a business or english or any other degree from Catholic is not the same as the equivalent from [INSERT TOP SCHOOL HERE].
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:This is why we need entrepreneurs to create more of the jobs your kids want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are English majors in high demand?
Actually, yes. The future is bright for humanities majors.
For low paying jobs.
https://www.cnbc.com/2024/03/14/here-are-college-majors-with-the-highest-and-lowest-rate-of-return.html
College majors with the highest and lowest return
A recent study published in the American Educational Research Journal found that engineering and computer science majors provide the highest returns in lifetime earnings, followed by business, health, and math and science majors. Education and humanities majors and arts majors had the lowest returns of the 10 fields of study considered.
STEM, health and business majors are among the highest-paying, leading to average annual wages that are higher at the entry level and significantly greater over the course of a career compared with liberal arts and humanities majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are English majors in high demand?
Actually, yes. The future is bright for humanities majors.
For low paying jobs.
A recent study published in the American Educational Research Journal found that engineering and computer science majors provide the highest returns in lifetime earnings, followed by business, health, and math and science majors. Education and humanities majors and arts majors had the lowest returns of the 10 fields of study considered.
STEM, health and business majors are among the highest-paying, leading to average annual wages that are higher at the entry level and significantly greater over the course of a career compared with liberal arts and humanities majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's good that they're not expanding the seats. My English major found a good high-paying job quite easily out of school, but I know there are not clearly established paths for those majors as there are (or at least used to be) for CS majors.
Please share firm and $.
I won't name the firm but it's a large consulting firm with quantitative focus. Salary is around $90k. I agree with the advice to go to the best school you can get into, do as well as you can in that school, and don't accept the notion that you are limited by your major. My English major also took math, econ, government, etc, so firms knew she could do the work.
Anonymous wrote:That's why my kid is double majoring with math. Hoping for options...just in case.
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!!!
Unless you have good connections/networking, that will not help.
DS will graduate from an Ivy, commencement is today, and he is still looking for for a job, as most of his friends who don't have connections. Those with connections have good jobs.
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!!!
Unless you have good connections/networking, that will not help.
DS will graduate from an Ivy, commencement is today, and he is still looking for for a job, as most of his friends who don't have connections. Those with connections have good jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are English majors in high demand?
Actually, yes. The future is bright for humanities majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What market isn't saturated?
Also, this is why it is so hard to get admitted to a CS program -- they aren't expanding the seats to meet student demand unless there is market demand.
UMD CP actually halved the CS class, but I think that was due to too many students who are not ready for it being interested in it, and wanting to keep the classes more intimate. UMD is also developing its AI/ML programs.
Job market is cyclical, but low level IT jobs have all been offshored. The big thing now is AI and ML, both of which are related to CS degrees. Some colleges are now starting to offer AI majors. That's the next big thing.
Lets push more kids into a technology whose primary benefit is requiring less workers
Anonymous wrote:Are English majors in high demand?