Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She should take some math and the hardest statistics classes - sociology can be very quantitative, and she should make sure she has good grades.
This. If she knows a lot of stats, she'll do fine employment wise.
What entry level job would she get with a sociology major and statistics courses?
Data analyst/research analyst in marketing research. I hire interns for a marketing research dept and often they are psychology+stats majors and occasionally sociology+stats.
A big plus 1 on this. I work in tech and we can’t hire data analytics people fast enough. Enough stats as she can manage including stats programming. And if she learns so qualitative research skills too (interviewing, ethnography) she will be very well set.
Anonymous wrote:My cousin majored in sociology and now he's a VP at a credit card company making $$$. I'm not sure why you think it's such a dead end degree.
Anonymous wrote:My cousin majored in sociology and now he's a VP at a credit card company making $$$. I'm not sure why you think it's such a dead end degree.
Anonymous wrote:quit helicoptering
plenty of entry level jobs just want college grads regardless of major
Anonymous wrote:quit helicoptering
plenty of entry level jobs just want college grads regardless of major
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She should take some math and the hardest statistics classes - sociology can be very quantitative, and she should make sure she has good grades.
This. If she knows a lot of stats, she'll do fine employment wise.
What entry level job would she get with a sociology major and statistics courses?
Data analyst/research analyst in marketing research. I hire interns for a marketing research dept and often they are psychology+stats majors and occasionally sociology+stats.
Anonymous wrote:My cousin majored in sociology and now he's a VP at a credit card company making $$$. I'm not sure why you think it's such a dead end degree.
Anonymous wrote:quit helicoptering
plenty of entry level jobs just want college grads regardless of major
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is a rising sophomore in college, and she truly has absolutely no idea of what kind of career she wants. It's extremely frustrating for both her and us. She has decided to major in Sociology only because she find the classes interesting but she knows it won't make her employable. Personally, I would rather she major in something more practical where she can at least earn a decent wage while she figures out what it is she really wants to do.
