Anonymous wrote:It's not 1970 folks, it's not even 1990 or 1995 when young parents were in college, it's about to be 2017. It's a global economy. Jobs are hi-tech. Dummy degrees from non-selective colleges are nearly worthless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For your children's sake, drop the criticism and be supportive. Sure, maybe she's unemployed because she majored in sociology, but she also might be unemployed because a lot of recent grads are unemployed -- it's a terrible job market for them. Here is a recent study showing that: https://www.cgsnet.org/ckfinder/userfiles/files/Unemployment_Final_update1.pdf
It shows for instance that yes recent humanities grads have a 9.4% unemployment rate, but even computer and math majors have an 8.2% unemployment rate. It sucks for everyone right now. And the lowest unemployment rate among recent grads isn't engineering or accounting or whatever -- it's teaching.
Don't listen to this person. I was a sociology major. You are right to be concerned, very concerned.
Anonymous wrote:It doesn't help when you have all the con artist faculty filling them with empty promises four years. Then when they can't get a job they sell them another scam: non-elite law schools and MBA programs!
Anonymous wrote:For your children's sake, drop the criticism and be supportive. Sure, maybe she's unemployed because she majored in sociology, but she also might be unemployed because a lot of recent grads are unemployed -- it's a terrible job market for them. Here is a recent study showing that: https://www.cgsnet.org/ckfinder/userfiles/files/Unemployment_Final_update1.pdf
It shows for instance that yes recent humanities grads have a 9.4% unemployment rate, but even computer and math majors have an 8.2% unemployment rate. It sucks for everyone right now. And the lowest unemployment rate among recent grads isn't engineering or accounting or whatever -- it's teaching.
Anonymous wrote:My oldest initially wanted to major in philosophy. Then religion. I was getting concerned, but didn't say anything. He changed his major about five more times before finally ending up with a double major Political Science and English. He is 26 and working on a Masters. He had no trouble at all finding a job.
Pretend know-it-all should be in lesser demand.Anonymous wrote:It's not 1970 folks, it's not even 1990 or 1995 when young parents were in college, it's about to be 2017. It's a global economy. Jobs are hi-tech. Dummy degrees from non-selective colleges are nearly worthless.