Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Business and engineering- high brow
Social services and education- low brow
Anything science or math- high brow
Interesting because I have seen on DCUM where people claim that getting an undergrad in business is low-brow, which being from a low-brow background, I did not know previously. Apparently, high-brow kids who are interested in business get a B.A in Economics and then go on to get their MBAs.
Those are mosty the kids who went to a school without undergrad business or weren’t able to get into the business school. When that happens, the school usually recommends economics instead.
Anonymous wrote:High brow - majors that do not lead to paying jobs. Things like art history or film. Trust fund kids can do them.
Low brow - jobs that lead to employment directly out of undergrad - nursing, respiratory therapist, etc.
Middle - engineering, [b]business[b], hard sciences, math - smart kid majors that eventually lead to jobs but the path is not direct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Business and engineering- high brow
Social services and education- low brow
Anything science or math- high brow
Interesting because I have seen on DCUM where people claim that getting an undergrad in business is low-brow, which being from a low-brow background, I did not know previously. Apparently, high-brow kids who are interested in business get a B.A in Economics and then go on to get their MBAs. [/quote
Those are mosty the kids who went to a school without undergrad business or weren’t able to get into the business school. When that happens, the school usually recommends economics instead.
Anonymous wrote:Electrical and chemical engineering are higher-brow than mechanical engineering. Civil engineering is the lowest-brow engineering. Humanities are usually higher-brow than social sciences but hard sciences are mixed.
Anonymous wrote:Do people actually think like this IRL?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Low brow: education majors. Unfortunately the teaching profession just doesn’t have respect (which I think it should.)
High Brow: STEM/pre-med
then respect it and say high brow but then again this post is just one of those that makes people feel good about themselves because they have miserable jobs and have to feel good about studying something boring like economics
Anonymous wrote:Do people actually think like this IRL?!
Anonymous wrote:Low brow: education majors. Unfortunately the teaching profession just doesn’t have respect (which I think it should.)
High Brow: STEM/pre-med