Anonymous wrote:Can't tell if people here are delusional or stupid, but yes, switch to an econ major, so he can have an actual job at the end of graduation. No one wants to be 28 being paid 30k as a researcher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would hire a physics major over an ecom major in a heartbeat. It is the hardest major next to math.
…outside of Engineering.
Nope. I was an engineering major. Kid is studying to be a physicist. Its not comparable. The math in physics is harder. The theory and abstraction is just harder. Engineering (materials science) was easier in comparison. Even in weed out courses.
Anonymous wrote:When a gazelle encounters a lion, the first thing it does is jump real high, and only then starts running. The jump doesn't aid it in getting away, but it signals to the lion that the gazelle is spry and not worth chasing.
There are a few majors that function like the gazelle jump - not useful in themselves, but they signal to employers that the recipient can handle tough problems and is not @#$&ing around. Physics would be the main one. There's a degree ROI report on the Georgetown website. I'd link it but I'm on my phone and about to go to bed. It shows that physics grads do very well - look it up and share it with DC.
Encourage him to apply for finance internships. They love physicists for quant positions, even more than math grads.
Anonymous wrote:It might be because the courses have become too difficult and he wants a reason to be out. But if he is doing well and loves the subject, he should stay. He'll be more successful and make more money.
The key in anything is love for the subject.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would hire a physics major over an ecom major in a heartbeat. It is the hardest major next to math.
…outside of Engineering.
Nope. I was an engineering major. Kid is studying to be a physicist. Its not comparable. The math in physics is harder. The theory and abstraction is just harder. Engineering (materials science) was easier in comparison. Even in weed out courses.
Engineering is more of a grind type of hard. Physics is an extremely high level of abstraction. Can I do it all vs. can I understand even a bit of it.
Anonymous wrote:It might be because the courses have become too difficult and he wants a reason to be out. But if he is doing well and loves the subject, he should stay. He'll be more successful and make more money.
The key in anything is love for the subject.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would hire a physics major over an ecom major in a heartbeat. It is the hardest major next to math.
…outside of Engineering.
Nope. I was an engineering major. Kid is studying to be a physicist. Its not comparable. The math in physics is harder. The theory and abstraction is just harder. Engineering (materials science) was easier in comparison. Even in weed out courses.