Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi OP! Thanks for posting so I could read all of the responses. Like you, I have kid that's a senior with terrible grades and a SAT score in the 900s. As a person, super sweet, pleasant, easy going. I feel like we are all alone when reading the questions about college typically in this forum. I am just hoping my kid can get in somewhere and then I'm hoping they can actually be successful there. I haven't been thinking too much about a major, but maybe I should be!
OP here. Thank you to all, I am writing down all of the majors mentioned to run it by him. Also will reassure him and myself that there is no rush. I just want to say thank you to this poster because yes, it feels very alone. My son is so sweet and a good kid but he just doesn’t seem like the kids on here and that scared me a bit. My son has many positives. Looking back, I see how my post mentioned only his weaknesses. He is respectful, he plays sports for fun, he likes to work out, he likes to keep his room in order/clean, plays video games, good with his much younger siblings and likes science the most. I honestly could see him being a health or PE teacher!
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP! Thanks for posting so I could read all of the responses. Like you, I have kid that's a senior with terrible grades and a SAT score in the 900s. As a person, super sweet, pleasant, easy going. I feel like we are all alone when reading the questions about college typically in this forum. I am just hoping my kid can get in somewhere and then I'm hoping they can actually be successful there. I haven't been thinking too much about a major, but maybe I should be!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t sign up your kid to become cannon fodder for a wannabe dictator.
Jesus Christ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sociology, English, Marketing, Media Studies, Communications
I'd also consider that a college with 8 week terms might be better for him than the traditional 16 weeks. Then he will be focused on 2 classes at a time (including summer session, he can still graduate in four years).
No to the bolded. All of them require hustle to be successful. OP’s kid is the kind that needs to be told what to do.
OP, I’d look at allied health professions if he can manage basic science. I know someone who just graduated and does radiation therapy - sets and manages the equipment. The starting salary was just over $100K with good benefits and 40 hrs work week.
Anonymous wrote:Sociology, English, Marketing, Media Studies, Communications
I'd also consider that a college with 8 week terms might be better for him than the traditional 16 weeks. Then he will be focused on 2 classes at a time (including summer session, he can still graduate in four years).
Anonymous wrote:Criminal justice
Occupational therapy
Anonymous wrote:Is he good with people? Can he sell ice to eskimos? Walk up to a foyine girl and talk to her like he's known her forever? If so, he should consider a non-math business major, something like marketing. He'll crush it and end up making more money than most of his "academic" classmates.
Anonymous wrote:How about sales or something else in business?
Anonymous wrote:There’s a kid in my neighbourhood who had a middling hs GPA, really nice guy and good with people. He went to Community college and got his training as Electrician. Now at age 24 he makes almost as much money as I do and has work booked out for months and months. He has written his own ticket and it’s just doing so great. Someone may have mentioned this earlier in this thread but I would definitely take a look at the trades. There’s so much work there and the pay is great, can offer both job stability and independence.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Accounting requires some stats classes. Also, not everyone is cut out for accounting. It takes a certain personality. I worked with accountants most of my career.