Anonymous wrote:I would consider business with concentration in management and then an accounting adjacent career path in Accounts Payable, Billing , etc. Google Billing Analyst, Accounts Payable Analyst positions. Very minimal basic math and very basic accounting skills required but there is a career progression to supervisor, manager, director roles that pay pretty well. Procurement is another accounting adjacent field with a similar career progression path. Look up procurement analyst roles. Plenty of options for him in Corporate support roles. Another option is a concentration in HR with careers in payroll processing or HR, including benefits, recruiting, training, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Not everyone belongs in college straightaway. Try a couple of years at a community college and see how it goes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t sign up your kid to become cannon fodder for a wannabe dictator.
Jesus Christ.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you all for the responses. I was so worried that I would get slammed for this. He is a senior in high school. I guess he feels like everyone else knows their major so he feels like he should as well. I did tell him that the first year will pretty much the same for everyone no matter their major. He will be taking the non credit Math, Reading and Writing classes during the Summer, on campus, because his SAT was so low. He does not like that idea but I think it is great to help prepare him for college. To follow up with others, he is not artistic at all, he struggled with advanced Math and we bumped him down to regular and he obtained a B. He is a kid that honestly has no motivation or desire. His dad thinks that he is perfect for the military. He is the type of kid that if you tell him to do it, he will do it and not complain but does not take initiative on his own. Dad said that is the military for him but we have to support that he wants to go to college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS who is awful at math is a communications major. He’s a good writer and all of the non-math classes have been easy for him so far in college. He is at a liberal arts school so the first two years are core courses in a lot of different areas so he didn’t need to choose a major until the end of sophomore year. He only needed to take one math course to satisfy that requirement. He took pre-calculus again and that was the end of his dreaded math courses. Look into small, supportive liberal arts schools with a focus on undergraduate teaching. My son went to the tutoring center to get help with that math course.
What fuggin school does he attend?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about law enforcement? You can get a criminal justice degree, which from what I have heard is not that hard, then go to the police academy. I believe you get paid more if you have a degree.
Or a fire fighter? EMT?
Ooooh, I like these, OP!
Anonymous wrote:Don’t sign up your kid to become cannon fodder for a wannabe dictator.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Regardless of his grades, he doesn't need to know his major yet. Half of those people that "know their major" will change anyway.
This, this, this!
Also, the military is still an option after college, and then he could go to officer training and become an officer (almost) immediately versus going in as enlisted.
Someone with a 900 SAT is not a great candidate for this.
(Don't come at me, you know I don't mean the SAT is required for OCS.)
SAT is just one part of a person. Of course its ok for military. But enlisted life sucks.
Anonymous wrote:My DS who is awful at math is a communications major. He’s a good writer and all of the non-math classes have been easy for him so far in college. He is at a liberal arts school so the first two years are core courses in a lot of different areas so he didn’t need to choose a major until the end of sophomore year. He only needed to take one math course to satisfy that requirement. He took pre-calculus again and that was the end of his dreaded math courses. Look into small, supportive liberal arts schools with a focus on undergraduate teaching. My son went to the tutoring center to get help with that math course.