Anonymous wrote:Nutrition. Great for personal interest, terrible for career. I should have done econ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As a parent, I will lety kid choose their major without trying to backseat drive. You get one shot at college, study what you want.
It's one thing to do that when college was cheap decades ago, but now college costs an insane amount of money, "study what you want" is frankly stupid.
But so is forcing your kid into a major they don't want-- they won't ever get the value out of it because they won't work hard at a career in a field they hate.
It has to be balanced. They can choose their major but need to have a reasonable plan for employment/career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As a parent, I will lety kid choose their major without trying to backseat drive. You get one shot at college, study what you want.
It's one thing to do that when college was cheap decades ago, but now college costs an insane amount of money, "study what you want" is frankly stupid.
But so is forcing your kid into a major they don't want-- they won't ever get the value out of it because they won't work hard at a career in a field they hate.
It has to be balanced. They can choose their major but need to have a reasonable plan for employment/career.
Or even worse, they will work hard at a career in a field they hate
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As a parent, I will lety kid choose their major without trying to backseat drive. You get one shot at college, study what you want.
It's one thing to do that when college was cheap decades ago, but now college costs an insane amount of money, "study what you want" is frankly stupid.
But so is forcing your kid into a major they don't want-- they won't ever get the value out of it because they won't work hard at a career in a field they hate.
It has to be balanced. They can choose their major but need to have a reasonable plan for employment/career.
Speak for yourself. I'm eternally grateful my parents forced me into a field I hated (engineering). The money is unbeatable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As a parent, I will lety kid choose their major without trying to backseat drive. You get one shot at college, study what you want.
It's one thing to do that when college was cheap decades ago, but now college costs an insane amount of money, "study what you want" is frankly stupid.
But so is forcing your kid into a major they don't want-- they won't ever get the value out of it because they won't work hard at a career in a field they hate.
It has to be balanced. They can choose their major but need to have a reasonable plan for employment/career.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. I should have majored in English. I actually knew this from the start, but had it in my head (reinforced by my dad) that English degrees aren't useful and I would never get a job. Wound up changing my major from psychology to poli sci. I was young and dumb and getting bad advice-- there is nothing inherently more marketable about psychology or politics sci! I should have just done English (actually *gasp* Creative Writing) and figured it out. I would have been happy as a high school English teacher, and actually am English degree would have been fine for my eventual career (JD, law).
As a parent, I will lety kid choose their major without trying to backseat drive. You get one shot at college, study what you want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As a parent, I will lety kid choose their major without trying to backseat drive. You get one shot at college, study what you want.
It's one thing to do that when college was cheap decades ago, but now college costs an insane amount of money, "study what you want" is frankly stupid.
But so is forcing your kid into a major they don't want-- they won't ever get the value out of it because they won't work hard at a career in a field they hate.
It has to be balanced. They can choose their major but need to have a reasonable plan for employment/career.