Anonymous wrote:Accounting is a good practical major with some (not too difficult) math. Just try to avoid being bored to death.
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 18 and currently a senior in high school. I just got accepted into one of my top-choice colleges. Now I hate to admit this, but I'm not a very studious person. I really want to major in something that doesn't require a lot of outside studying. I keep hearing that math, more specifically pure math, is by far one of the easiest and least-demanding majors. Does math sound like a good choice for me, given my terrible study habits?
Are you good at math?
I wouldn't say I'm terrific at high school math. I'm taking AP Calculus AB right now and I have a B.
Anonymous wrote:Easy time at college?
Not for Math majors.
Seriously. You have got to be the dumbest Math major ever.
If you want an easy time you need to study
Sports Education
Sports Therapy
Dance
Hotel Management
and all the other completely dumb subjects.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I majored in math in college. It is an incredibly difficult major. Doing well requires creativity and the fortitude to deal with coming across problems that you have no idea how to solve, even after many hours of study and research. There is also much that is stunningly beautiful, like Zermelo-Frankel set theory. If you enjoy this sort of study, the joy will help you get through much of the hard times, but if you don't, it will just be added misery.
Also, being a math major is usually lonely. I was just one of seven in my year (at a public university) majoring in math. I missed having a cohort to hang out with.
The term "pure math" makes me laugh. I know some people think it is sounds more impressive than applied math, but what is impressive is doing what you love and doing well at it.
Anyway, there really is no "pure" math, in the sense that even an abstract field of study like number theory has applications, e.g., for cryptography.
Applied math, like statistics, is generally considered easier than courses typically thought of as pure math, like topology and complex analysis. I would certainly not think of these courses as easy As.
Good point-all the math/stats majors are pretty lonely, everything is independent (not group) and you need to be incredibly self-motivated and the cohorts are small (and usually get smaller by the time you graduate)
You can't get a math degree without analysis. You can't even get a stats degree without it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I majored in math in college. It is an incredibly difficult major. Doing well requires creativity and the fortitude to deal with coming across problems that you have no idea how to solve, even after many hours of study and research. There is also much that is stunningly beautiful, like Zermelo-Frankel set theory. If you enjoy this sort of study, the joy will help you get through much of the hard times, but if you don't, it will just be added misery.
Also, being a math major is usually lonely. I was just one of seven in my year (at a public university) majoring in math. I missed having a cohort to hang out with.
The term "pure math" makes me laugh. I know some people think it is sounds more impressive than applied math, but what is impressive is doing what you love and doing well at it.
Anyway, there really is no "pure" math, in the sense that even an abstract field of study like number theory has applications, e.g., for cryptography.
Applied math, like statistics, is generally considered easier than courses typically thought of as pure math, like topology and complex analysis. I would certainly not think of these courses as easy As.
Good point-all the math/stats majors are pretty lonely, everything is independent (not group) and you need to be incredibly self-motivated and the cohorts are small (and usually get smaller by the time you graduate)
Anonymous wrote:Okay, that's not the case for all schools. LACs in particular have great math communities with a challenging curriculum yet caring dynamic. There are math learning communities and great mentorship by professors and more advanced math undergrads. At some of the top ones, some 8-10% of the student bodyis a math major- much more popular than at universities (even absolutely). Part of the reason is to have a more practical degree, but the larger reason is that there's an intellectualism involved with math that naturally draws LAC students.
I'm a professor and if I had a child interested in math I'd have them check out LACS. Even if they were exceptionally qualified, I'd have them consider the elite ones with excellent track records like Williams and Harvey Mudd.
Anonymous wrote:I majored in math in college. It is an incredibly difficult major. Doing well requires creativity and the fortitude to deal with coming across problems that you have no idea how to solve, even after many hours of study and research. There is also much that is stunningly beautiful, like Zermelo-Frankel set theory. If you enjoy this sort of study, the joy will help you get through much of the hard times, but if you don't, it will just be added misery.
Also, being a math major is usually lonely. I was just one of seven in my year (at a public university) majoring in math. I missed having a cohort to hang out with.
The term "pure math" makes me laugh. I know some people think it is sounds more impressive than applied math, but what is impressive is doing what you love and doing well at it.
Anyway, there really is no "pure" math, in the sense that even an abstract field of study like number theory has applications, e.g., for cryptography.
Applied math, like statistics, is generally considered easier than courses typically thought of as pure math, like topology and complex analysis. I would certainly not think of these courses as easy As.