Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a easy do nothing major
Perfect for morons in this area
Be stagnating bureaucrat without common sense and be part of swamp
Russian troll fail.
The truth hurts
Saying like it is
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The return on investment for a STEM degree is about double that of a LA egree, based on the same data set.
A STEM degree can be a liberal arts degree! You just get it at a school with a liberal arts core curriculum rather than a technical school or large university with specialized departments. I got a chem major at a liberal arts college. It's a liberal arts degree (and has served me well). My husband has a sociology major at a liberal arts college. It's also a liberal arts degree and has served him well.
Large universities can offer liberal arts educations. In fact, most of them do.
The difference is liberal arts colleges specialize in them, usually resulting in fewer graduate programs.
The largest school at UVA by far is the liberal arts college.
Oh my god. You people are so ignorant about this terminology.
A liberal arts college is a college without extensive graduate programs. That's why it's not considered a university.
That's in contrast to an undergrad college that sits within a university.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a easy do nothing major
Perfect for morons in this area
Be stagnating bureaucrat without common sense and be part of swamp
Russian troll fail.
The truth hurts
Saying like it is
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a easy do nothing major
Perfect for morons in this area
Be stagnating bureaucrat without common sense and be part of swamp
Russian troll fail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The return on investment for a STEM degree is about double that of a LA egree, based on the same data set.
A STEM degree can be a liberal arts degree! You just get it at a school with a liberal arts core curriculum rather than a technical school or large university with specialized departments. I got a chem major at a liberal arts college. It's a liberal arts degree (and has served me well). My husband has a sociology major at a liberal arts college. It's also a liberal arts degree and has served him well.
Large universities can offer liberal arts educations. In fact, most of them do.
The difference is liberal arts colleges specialize in them, usually resulting in fewer graduate programs.
The largest school at UVA by far is the liberal arts college.
Oh my god. You people are so ignorant about this terminology.
A liberal arts college is a college without extensive graduate programs. That's why it's not considered a university.
That's in contrast to an undergrad college that sits within a university.
Well, OK. But this thread is about liberal arts DEGREES. Your BA in English or psychology or whatever is still a liberal arts degree whether you got it at Arizona State or Williams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The return on investment for a STEM degree is about double that of a LA egree, based on the same data set.
A STEM degree can be a liberal arts degree! You just get it at a school with a liberal arts core curriculum rather than a technical school or large university with specialized departments. I got a chem major at a liberal arts college. It's a liberal arts degree (and has served me well). My husband has a sociology major at a liberal arts college. It's also a liberal arts degree and has served him well.
Large universities can offer liberal arts educations. In fact, most of them do.
The difference is liberal arts colleges specialize in them, usually resulting in fewer graduate programs.
The largest school at UVA by far is the liberal arts college.
Oh my god. You people are so ignorant about this terminology.
A liberal arts college is a college without extensive graduate programs. That's why it's not considered a university.
That's in contrast to an undergrad college that sits within a university.
Anonymous wrote:It’s a easy do nothing major
Perfect for morons in this area
Be stagnating bureaucrat without common sense and be part of swamp
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The return on investment for a STEM degree is about double that of a LA egree, based on the same data set.
A STEM degree can be a liberal arts degree! You just get it at a school with a liberal arts core curriculum rather than a technical school or large university with specialized departments. I got a chem major at a liberal arts college. It's a liberal arts degree (and has served me well). My husband has a sociology major at a liberal arts college. It's also a liberal arts degree and has served him well.
Large universities can offer liberal arts educations. In fact, most of them do.
The difference is liberal arts colleges specialize in them, usually resulting in fewer graduate programs.
The largest school at UVA by far is the liberal arts college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The return on investment for a STEM degree is about double that of a LA egree, based on the same data set.
A STEM degree can be a liberal arts degree! You just get it at a school with a liberal arts core curriculum rather than a technical school or large university with specialized departments. I got a chem major at a liberal arts college. It's a liberal arts degree (and has served me well). My husband has a sociology major at a liberal arts college. It's also a liberal arts degree and has served him well.
Large universities can offer liberal arts educations. In fact, most of them do.
The difference is liberal arts colleges specialize in them, usually resulting in fewer graduate programs.
Anonymous wrote:I’ll always hire a liberal arts grad from a top school than some pre-professional drone from some state uni.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The return on investment for a STEM degree is about double that of a LA egree, based on the same data set.
A STEM degree can be a liberal arts degree! You just get it at a school with a liberal arts core curriculum rather than a technical school or large university with specialized departments. I got a chem major at a liberal arts college. It's a liberal arts degree (and has served me well). My husband has a sociology major at a liberal arts college. It's also a liberal arts degree and has served him well.