Anonymous wrote:You must be rich. I would not pay for this degree.
Anonymous wrote:History major here, did graduate work, tested into Foreigh Service, opted to go to law school. At the appropriate school, History is one of the best majors to equip people in reading, writing, and analyzing vast amounts of material in a short period of time. I combined it with Econ so I also gained quantitative rigor. Anybody who is looking for long-term success is going to graduate school unless you are an extraordinarily gifted STEM kid who may go into tech or engineering immediately. So I would commend undergraduate majors like History and Philosophy for anybody likely to go into business, law or policy, and ignore the rubes who post nonsense on this site. But I would be very careful about the major at certain universities, where departments have been turned upside down over the past 30 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The university will matter for this degree.
Wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to law school.
Me, too.
Anonymous wrote:I did a program teaching English and US Culture in Japan after college. (JET Program, highly recommend it)
Thought I would go into Foreign Service or Law school.
Worked as a paralegal in a law firm while applying to law school. Hated it.
Moved over to an entry level digital role in Sales and marketing for a few years.
Then got my MBA and have had a 25+ year business career with mostly Fortune 500s.
I can write and read very well, and that helps in my career. I also know the history and geography of many of the cultures that are part of my multinational company, which helps more than you might think when dealing with people in different continents.
You can do a lot with that kind of degree.
Anonymous wrote:I went to law school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What did your history major student do after college. Anyone do a PhD in history? Get a job at a think tank? Assuming just an undergraduate degree is not enough.
DH has an undergrad degree in history and is a CEO at a mid size (800 people) tech company.
.. and had to get a masters to get there, right?
Anonymous wrote:The university will matter for this degree.