Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:dcum always recommends CS and Engineering as degrees with best employment but I recruit finance undergrad and it is a decent major.
I don't really see the difference between DCUM promoting econ majors and finance degrees. They overwhelmingly go to the same careers.
That’s not really true. Econ and Finance majors from top schools may end up in IB and consulting, but you will find more Finance majors working for F500 companies either in trainee programs or going into financial planning & analysis or treasury functions. Econ majors aren’t usually hired for these roles.
Statistically, you have far more Econ majors pursuing graduate work vs finance majors as well (and interestingly, you have Math and Econ majors pursuing finance PhDs in higher numbers than finance undergrads).
I don't necessarily see the difference, other than you just saying econ majors aren't hired. From DC's recent cohort, quite a few are going to Apple after going into their Financial Developer program, and a ton participate in those trainee programs for financial planning and many of those jobs list "Finance, Financial Economics, Econ,..." as acceptable degrees. Sure, many went into IB or Consulting, but most end up in typical financial positions that you would get from a decent finance program. Of course, more people are going into Econ grad school-there's more economics to do out in the academic world, and if your goal is to work for the Fed or some prime-time international NPO, grad programs place well into them. The math majors going into finance want to be quants, not really surprising to me.
From what school? You have to go beyond the Top 50 to understand the difference for an Econ major vs a Finance major and career paths.
Actually…there is plenty of grad school work for Finance PhDs but schools have a hard time getting people to pursue those PhDs…that is why a finance PhD comes with a generous stipend and it is one of the few academic areas with lots of tenure-track jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:dcum always recommends CS and Engineering as degrees with best employment but I recruit finance undergrad and it is a decent major.
I don't really see the difference between DCUM promoting econ majors and finance degrees. They overwhelmingly go to the same careers.
That’s not really true. Econ and Finance majors from top schools may end up in IB and consulting, but you will find more Finance majors working for F500 companies either in trainee programs or going into financial planning & analysis or treasury functions. Econ majors aren’t usually hired for these roles.
Statistically, you have far more Econ majors pursuing graduate work vs finance majors as well (and interestingly, you have Math and Econ majors pursuing finance PhDs in higher numbers than finance undergrads).
I don't necessarily see the difference, other than you just saying econ majors aren't hired. From DC's recent cohort, quite a few are going to Apple after going into their Financial Developer program, and a ton participate in those trainee programs for financial planning and many of those jobs list "Finance, Financial Economics, Econ,..." as acceptable degrees. Sure, many went into IB or Consulting, but most end up in typical financial positions that you would get from a decent finance program. Of course, more people are going into Econ grad school-there's more economics to do out in the academic world, and if your goal is to work for the Fed or some prime-time international NPO, grad programs place well into them. The math majors going into finance want to be quants, not really surprising to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:dcum always recommends CS and Engineering as degrees with best employment but I recruit finance undergrad and it is a decent major.
I don't really see the difference between DCUM promoting econ majors and finance degrees. They overwhelmingly go to the same careers.
That’s not really true. Econ and Finance majors from top schools may end up in IB and consulting, but you will find more Finance majors working for F500 companies either in trainee programs or going into financial planning & analysis or treasury functions. Econ majors aren’t usually hired for these roles.
Statistically, you have far more Econ majors pursuing graduate work vs finance majors as well (and interestingly, you have Math and Econ majors pursuing finance PhDs in higher numbers than finance undergrads).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:dcum always recommends CS and Engineering as degrees with best employment but I recruit finance undergrad and it is a decent major.
I don't really see the difference between DCUM promoting econ majors and finance degrees. They overwhelmingly go to the same careers.
Anonymous wrote:dcum always recommends CS and Engineering as degrees with best employment but I recruit finance undergrad and it is a decent major.
Anonymous wrote:Business is a safe major and pretty much guarantees a well paid job after college and lucrative career options afterwards
The young adults now who majored in business or attended an undergraduate business program are thriving post college. Some are in PE others are in investment banking or in finance teams at Fortune 500 companies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As always, people still living in the 80s are clueless.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/college-major-highest-lowest-incomes/
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/college-major-highest-lowest-incomes/
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/college-major-highest-lowest-incomes/
Business analytics, Finance, MIS, Accounting are all under Business program.
That's why in general, business program is harder to get in and more competitive.
You know, there does exist a general "business major" that will accept anybody. When I say I don't want my child to major in business, I mean I don't want them to major in business. That does not mean I don't want them to pick a major under the business program, like accounting or finance.
dp.. the way it general works is you are a business major, then pick a track, like accounting or finance. Most colleges don't have a "finance" major. It's within the business major.
This is how it is at my son’s university.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Snobbery?
STEM is hot. Law is prestigious. DCUM seems to not like many majors outside those fields.
I think degrees in nursing, early childhood education, soil science, construction management, etc. are all better than a business degree, and I imagine that most DCUMers would agree with me. It's not about snobbery at all.
Early childhood education is important but you run the risk of making as low as minimum wage for your entire career. It would be a terrible financial decision to major in it.
Disagree. Elementary school pay is not minimum wage. I just looked it up and in my district (Arlington) pay starts at 35 dollars an hour, plus benefits, for a 10-month job. Annual raises aren't great but if you do some online coursework to get a masters and you teach year-round, you can definitely be making 100K by the end of your career. I think elementary education is just as good as a general business degree in terms of ROI, all things considered. And we know that elementary education isn't a lucrative degree, which underscores how bad a business degree can be.
(To be clear, a business major is fine if you really hustle or already have connections, and obviously business-related majors like finance and accounting are way more lucrative than elementary education.)
Have you ever lived outside the DMV? And if you teach in MoCo, can you afford to live where your comfortable students live?
Elementary is very low paid in my state. Early childhood specialization is often what daycare staff get.
Business, engineering, cs interns get paid decent money. Student teaching might even cost the candidate $$$.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are these liberal arts majors finding jobs?
My husband and I were liberal arts majors and we are suffering in the job market in our thirties. We will advise our children to study business!
They get internships.
Math and Physics Majors nab internships in finance and tech.
Anthropology/Sociology people place well into "People" teams aka HR, and they do very well when it comes to program development/non profit structure teams.
English/History majors are all over the map and can write which is always a plus.
A lot of Ethnic/Women studies in HR too along with Policy.
Econ/Government/IR end up in many similar spots.
Cool infographic? Some of us go to decent schools where this is less of a concern. Obviously don't get a sociology degree from Kent State lmao.
? but most students don't got elite colleges. They go to state colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are these liberal arts majors finding jobs?
My husband and I were liberal arts majors and we are suffering in the job market in our thirties. We will advise our children to study business!
They get internships.
Math and Physics Majors nab internships in finance and tech.
Anthropology/Sociology people place well into "People" teams aka HR, and they do very well when it comes to program development/non profit structure teams.
English/History majors are all over the map and can write which is always a plus.
A lot of Ethnic/Women studies in HR too along with Policy.
Econ/Government/IR end up in many similar spots.
Cool infographic? Some of us go to decent schools where this is less of a concern. Obviously don't get a sociology degree from Kent State lmao.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As always, people still living in the 80s are clueless.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/college-major-highest-lowest-incomes/
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/college-major-highest-lowest-incomes/
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/college-major-highest-lowest-incomes/
Business analytics, Finance, MIS, Accounting are all under Business program.
That's why in general, business program is harder to get in and more competitive.
You know, there does exist a general "business major" that will accept anybody. When I say I don't want my child to major in business, I mean I don't want them to major in business. That does not mean I don't want them to pick a major under the business program, like accounting or finance.
I think people are assuming you mean BA from a college or university, not the old business degrees that were for people studying stenography, etc. Some schools only allow majors/concentrations within a business college and a degree is a BBA without a subhead. So, I think people are not answering according to your definition.
If a college offers a BBA degree with a concentration in finance, is that degree as marketable as a finance degree without the BBA ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are these liberal arts majors finding jobs?
My husband and I were liberal arts majors and we are suffering in the job market in our thirties. We will advise our children to study business!
They get internships.
Math and Physics Majors nab internships in finance and tech.
Anthropology/Sociology people place well into "People" teams aka HR, and they do very well when it comes to program development/non profit structure teams.
English/History majors are all over the map and can write which is always a plus.
A lot of Ethnic/Women studies in HR too along with Policy.
Econ/Government/IR end up in many similar spots.
Cool infographic? Some of us go to decent schools where this is less of a concern. Obviously don't get a sociology degree from Kent State lmao.