It can have an advantage with landing that first job. It’s special. It’s rare. And, it definitely has an advantage for that Ph.D. application!Anonymous wrote:It’s the natural follow up to the AP arms race. If people want to do it, they should. I don’t see it having any distinct advantage in the workplace, though, in most cases.
This is complete rubbish! Quite the opposite.Anonymous wrote:Triple major is a actually a major red flag that something wrong is going on.
NP. Hours of learning aren’t wasted hours. An education is something that you retain for life. The tuition is the same at some schools whether you take one class or six. So, one could argue that the students only taking one major or two are not receiving the highest value for their money. The triple major did. It happens so seldom that it really stands out as an extraordinary achievement on graduate applications. A combined softer major with a harder STEM and a math major or Econ major certainly sets one apart from someone with only one major. It shows dedication and grit if this was accomplished in four years.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As the parent of a recent triple major graduate, who is headed to a top ten law school next year, two thoughts. First, being a triple major does get attention. It's not an instant passport to anything, but it always seems to spark a conversation about academic interests, which is usually a big plus. But second, your child should check on whether each major has a thesis or capstone requirement. My child worked his butt off with three theses, while most classmates coasted through senior year.
But that does not make your child better…or even normal TBH.
I am sure that most kids in your kid’s “top ten” law school did not triple, or even double major. It is not necessary is the point. And it is suspect in the eyes of some (ie “what are they trying to prove? Did they have any life outside of school”, etc).
Many of you are desperately trying to dissuade us from our perspective…but we disagree with you. Sorry for all of those (potentially) wasted hours and/or tuition dollars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As the parent of a recent triple major graduate, who is headed to a top ten law school next year, two thoughts. First, being a triple major does get attention. It's not an instant passport to anything, but it always seems to spark a conversation about academic interests, which is usually a big plus. But second, your child should check on whether each major has a thesis or capstone requirement. My child worked his butt off with three theses, while most classmates coasted through senior year.
But that does not make your child better…or even normal TBH.
I am sure that most kids in your kid’s “top ten” law school did not triple, or even double major. It is not necessary is the point. And it is suspect in the eyes of some (ie “what are they trying to prove? Did they have any life outside of school”, etc).
Many of you are desperately trying to dissuade us from our perspective…but we disagree with you. Sorry for all of those (potentially) wasted hours and/or tuition dollars.
Anonymous wrote:As the parent of a recent triple major graduate, who is headed to a top ten law school next year, two thoughts. First, being a triple major does get attention. It's not an instant passport to anything, but it always seems to spark a conversation about academic interests, which is usually a big plus. But second, your child should check on whether each major has a thesis or capstone requirement. My child worked his butt off with three theses, while most classmates coasted through senior year.
Anonymous wrote:Many employers value two related majors plus a foreign language.
Accounting & finance plus Spanish for one Big Four which acquired & expanded into Spanish speaking markets.
CS/econ/stats/data analysis are 4 majors which--if any combination--are favored by employers.
Creative writing/English/theater triple major for screenwriters.
Astonished by the posters who fail to understand the value of a triple majors as it creates more options for the student in the real world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s not true. If 2 applicants have the same stats on Accounting and Spanish, then the applicant with such deep course work to obtain a Finance major within the same 4 years as the other applicant will stand out as more accomplished.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many employers value two related majors plus a foreign language.
Accounting & finance plus Spanish for one Big Four which acquired & expanded into Spanish speaking markets.
CS/econ/stats/data analysis are 4 majors which--if any combination--are favored by employers.
Creative writing/English/theater triple major for screenwriters.
Astonished by the posters who fail to understand the value of a triple majors as it creates more options for the student in the real world.
+1
Very few are just triple majoring without a plan. It's typically two majors that are related, and often have cross over requirements (CS and Data analytics or Accounting and finance or IR and history/political science) and then they add in a separate major that is helpful (think Spanish for any business major or health sciences major or IR). Very few are majoring in art history, accounting and Russian.
I think it's more accurate to say it’s a cool idea, but not necessarily helpful. Would an Accounting/Finance/Spanish major fare better than an Accounting/Spanish major with a few finance credits? Not really, but it's cool that they did all 3.
I don't care how accomplished you are. I care if you can do the job I'm hiring you for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are trying to compare apples to oranges. Bachelor degrees are not the same as Master’s degrees. You should compare the triple major applicant with a BS degree against other BS degree applicants with less than three majors. Then compare your Master’s degree applicant against other Master degree applicants.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1 It trumps the double majors. It’s rare and it was done in 4 years. Some students struggle with one major in 4 years and these special bright kids accomplished 3 majors in 4 years. This is unique and shows the advanced mindset of learning for the sake of learning for grad school or a job. It was begot on hard work and fortitude. Talk about getting the value for your money.Anonymous wrote:A triple major makes the envious crabs drop their masks. It's fun to watch them squirm in their insecurity of being low achievers as they are not confident in their own education.
Does obtaining a BS and Masters in 4 years trump a triple major? It's like we need a Texas Hold'em sheet to know which hand beats which hand.
The question was what's a better use of 4 years.
Anonymous wrote:That’s not true. If 2 applicants have the same stats on Accounting and Spanish, then the applicant with such deep course work to obtain a Finance major within the same 4 years as the other applicant will stand out as more accomplished.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many employers value two related majors plus a foreign language.
Accounting & finance plus Spanish for one Big Four which acquired & expanded into Spanish speaking markets.
CS/econ/stats/data analysis are 4 majors which--if any combination--are favored by employers.
Creative writing/English/theater triple major for screenwriters.
Astonished by the posters who fail to understand the value of a triple majors as it creates more options for the student in the real world.
+1
Very few are just triple majoring without a plan. It's typically two majors that are related, and often have cross over requirements (CS and Data analytics or Accounting and finance or IR and history/political science) and then they add in a separate major that is helpful (think Spanish for any business major or health sciences major or IR). Very few are majoring in art history, accounting and Russian.
I think it's more accurate to say it’s a cool idea, but not necessarily helpful. Would an Accounting/Finance/Spanish major fare better than an Accounting/Spanish major with a few finance credits? Not really, but it's cool that they did all 3.
Anonymous wrote:That’s not true. If 2 applicants have the same stats on Accounting and Spanish, then the applicant with such deep course work to obtain a Finance major within the same 4 years as the other applicant will stand out as more accomplished.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many employers value two related majors plus a foreign language.
Accounting & finance plus Spanish for one Big Four which acquired & expanded into Spanish speaking markets.
CS/econ/stats/data analysis are 4 majors which--if any combination--are favored by employers.
Creative writing/English/theater triple major for screenwriters.
Astonished by the posters who fail to understand the value of a triple majors as it creates more options for the student in the real world.
+1
Very few are just triple majoring without a plan. It's typically two majors that are related, and often have cross over requirements (CS and Data analytics or Accounting and finance or IR and history/political science) and then they add in a separate major that is helpful (think Spanish for any business major or health sciences major or IR). Very few are majoring in art history, accounting and Russian.
I think it's more accurate to say it’s a cool idea, but not necessarily helpful. Would an Accounting/Finance/Spanish major fare better than an Accounting/Spanish major with a few finance credits? Not really, but it's cool that they did all 3.
Anonymous wrote:You are trying to compare apples to oranges. Bachelor degrees are not the same as Master’s degrees. You should compare the triple major applicant with a BS degree against other BS degree applicants with less than three majors. Then compare your Master’s degree applicant against other Master degree applicants.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1 It trumps the double majors. It’s rare and it was done in 4 years. Some students struggle with one major in 4 years and these special bright kids accomplished 3 majors in 4 years. This is unique and shows the advanced mindset of learning for the sake of learning for grad school or a job. It was begot on hard work and fortitude. Talk about getting the value for your money.Anonymous wrote:A triple major makes the envious crabs drop their masks. It's fun to watch them squirm in their insecurity of being low achievers as they are not confident in their own education.
Does obtaining a BS and Masters in 4 years trump a triple major? It's like we need a Texas Hold'em sheet to know which hand beats which hand.
Anonymous wrote:That’s not true. If 2 applicants have the same stats on Accounting and Spanish, then the applicant with such deep course work to obtain a Finance major within the same 4 years as the other applicant will stand out as more accomplished.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many employers value two related majors plus a foreign language.
Accounting & finance plus Spanish for one Big Four which acquired & expanded into Spanish speaking markets.
CS/econ/stats/data analysis are 4 majors which--if any combination--are favored by employers.
Creative writing/English/theater triple major for screenwriters.
Astonished by the posters who fail to understand the value of a triple majors as it creates more options for the student in the real world.
+1
Very few are just triple majoring without a plan. It's typically two majors that are related, and often have cross over requirements (CS and Data analytics or Accounting and finance or IR and history/political science) and then they add in a separate major that is helpful (think Spanish for any business major or health sciences major or IR). Very few are majoring in art history, accounting and Russian.
I think it's more accurate to say it’s a cool idea, but not necessarily helpful. Would an Accounting/Finance/Spanish major fare better than an Accounting/Spanish major with a few finance credits? Not really, but it's cool that they did all 3.