Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a communication/marketing major, just graduated.
He has a ton of friends that did the same.
They have various jobs with Discovery, ESPN. They also got jobs as recruiters and jobs in finance.
They learn to think and write.
There is digital media which is interesting… every marketing firm now needs to analyze their digital data.
If she can write technical writing pays well and you don’t have to be technical.
what school
Emerson
It's a good information and reality that people need to be aware of when making decisions.
That is in fact the major function of this forum
Mediocre major at a mediocre school seems very risky, but some people have to gamble.
Lol! Okay, Yea seems like the gamble has paid off for his friends.
He’s in graduate school for free. A few are in England doing a master and the rest have solid jobs.
Some people may get lucky, but on the average looking depressing
https://www.collegefactual.com/colleges/emerson-college/academic-life/academic-majors/communication-journalism-media/journalism/#:~:text=Salary%20of%20Journalism%20Graduates%20with%20a%20Master's%20Degree,Their%20median%20salary%20is%20%2442%2C650
"Journalism majors who earn their bachelor's degree from Emerson go on to jobs where they make a median salary of $33,900 a year. This is higher than $30,000"
Even with grad degree
"Journalism majors graduating with a master's degree from Emerson make a median salary of $35,000 a year"
My god, you’re tiresome. Are you even employed because you’re all over this forum making fun of people who major in what interests them instead of what makes the most money. Are you an unemployed finance bro wannabe?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not pay for my child’s education if they desired to pursue journalism or marketing. Sorry, but I am only paying for high paying professional jobs.
So is everyone else. But we can't have everyone becoming doctors or lawyers or programmers. Someone has to pick up trash, clean the streets, take your fast food order, drive your Uber, pick up and deliver your fast food order...
Get your kid pick up trash and deliver fast food
Can you imagine a society where 33% are doctors, 33% are layers, and 33% IT? You'll be cleaning up after yourself.
No I can not.
So,
my kid = engineer
your kid = pick up trash
Your engineer kid should engineer a way to pick up the trash. Problem
Solved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not pay for my child’s education if they desired to pursue journalism or marketing. Sorry, but I am only paying for high paying professional jobs.
So is everyone else. But we can't have everyone becoming doctors or lawyers or programmers. Someone has to pick up trash, clean the streets, take your fast food order, drive your Uber, pick up and deliver your fast food order...
Get your kid pick up trash and deliver fast food
Can you imagine a society where 33% are doctors, 33% are layers, and 33% IT? You'll be cleaning up after yourself.
No I can not.
So,
my kid = engineer
your kid = pick up trash
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not pay for my child’s education if they desired to pursue journalism or marketing. Sorry, but I am only paying for high paying professional jobs.
So is everyone else. But we can't have everyone becoming doctors or lawyers or programmers. Someone has to pick up trash, clean the streets, take your fast food order, drive your Uber, pick up and deliver your fast food order...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a communication/marketing major, just graduated.
He has a ton of friends that did the same.
They have various jobs with Discovery, ESPN. They also got jobs as recruiters and jobs in finance.
They learn to think and write.
There is digital media which is interesting… every marketing firm now needs to analyze their digital data.
If she can write technical writing pays well and you don’t have to be technical.
what school
Emerson
Mediocre major at a mediocre school seems very risky, but some people have to gamble.
Lol! Okay, Yea seems like the gamble has paid off for his friends.
He’s in graduate school for free. A few are in England doing a master and the rest have solid jobs.
Some people may get lucky, but on the average looking depressing
https://www.collegefactual.com/colleges/emerson-college/academic-life/academic-majors/communication-journalism-media/journalism/#:~:text=Salary%20of%20Journalism%20Graduates%20with%20a%20Master's%20Degree,Their%20median%20salary%20is%20%2442%2C650
"Journalism majors who earn their bachelor's degree from Emerson go on to jobs where they make a median salary of $33,900 a year. This is higher than $30,000"
Even with grad degree
"Journalism majors graduating with a master's degree from Emerson make a median salary of $35,000 a year"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a communication/marketing major, just graduated.
He has a ton of friends that did the same.
They have various jobs with Discovery, ESPN. They also got jobs as recruiters and jobs in finance.
They learn to think and write.
There is digital media which is interesting… every marketing firm now needs to analyze their digital data.
If she can write technical writing pays well and you don’t have to be technical.
what school
Emerson
Mediocre major at a mediocre school seems very risky, but some people have to gamble.
Lol! Okay, Yea seems like the gamble has paid off for his friends.
He’s in graduate school for free. A few are in England doing a master and the rest have solid jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not pay for my child’s education if they desired to pursue journalism or marketing. Sorry, but I am only paying for high paying professional jobs.
Good for you. That’s not what OP asked. Good luck to your kid.
Anonymous wrote:I would not pay for my child’s education if they desired to pursue journalism or marketing. Sorry, but I am only paying for high paying professional jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not pay for my child’s education if they desired to pursue journalism or marketing. Sorry, but I am only paying for high paying professional jobs.
So is everyone else. But we can't have everyone becoming doctors or lawyers or programmers. Someone has to pick up trash, clean the streets, take your fast food order, drive your Uber, pick up and deliver your fast food order...
Get your kid pick up trash and deliver fast food
Can you imagine a society where 33% are doctors, 33% are layers, and 33% IT? You'll be cleaning up after yourself.
No I can not.
So,
my kid = engineer
your kid = pick up trash
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not pay for my child’s education if they desired to pursue journalism or marketing. Sorry, but I am only paying for high paying professional jobs.
So is everyone else. But we can't have everyone becoming doctors or lawyers or programmers. Someone has to pick up trash, clean the streets, take your fast food order, drive your Uber, pick up and deliver your fast food order...
Get your kid pick up trash and deliver fast food
Can you imagine a society where 33% are doctors, 33% are layers, and 33% IT? You'll be cleaning up after yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not pay for my child’s education if they desired to pursue journalism or marketing. Sorry, but I am only paying for high paying professional jobs.
So is everyone else. But we can't have everyone becoming doctors or lawyers or programmers. Someone has to pick up trash, clean the streets, take your fast food order, drive your Uber, pick up and deliver your fast food order...
Get your kid pick up trash and deliver fast food
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not pay for my child’s education if they desired to pursue journalism or marketing. Sorry, but I am only paying for high paying professional jobs.
Once again, who do you think runs business? Not STEM majors. This board is so weird that you seem to think no one exists unless they are in IT.
OP, my DH was a journalism major and has had a great career in marketing communications predominately in IT/software industry. Tons of jobs, six figures. That said, I wouldn’t recommend journalism as a major, marketing with a journalism minor sounds like a direct path to Marketing/communications and there are absolutely jobs in that field.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a hiring manager/director -- I've been burned too many times by generic degrees in marketing/communication. It seems to produce individuals who only think and write in sound bites. Get a degrees which develops and advances skills in critical thinking, writing and analysis. I've had greater success in hiring english, history and (believe it or not) anthropolgy majors -- with minors data analytics or econ. I can teach you how to be successful in our company and industry -- but I dont have time to teach you how to think and write
Glad to hear that as my DD is an anthropology major
Anonymous wrote:As a hiring manager/director -- I've been burned too many times by generic degrees in marketing/communication. It seems to produce individuals who only think and write in sound bites. Get a degrees which develops and advances skills in critical thinking, writing and analysis. I've had greater success in hiring english, history and (believe it or not) anthropolgy majors -- with minors data analytics or econ. I can teach you how to be successful in our company and industry -- but I dont have time to teach you how to think and write
