Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just returned from a college reunion, and my friends' kids who majored in CS and graduated last year and this year are all un- or under-employed. It seems pretty obvious to me that low-level CS jobs are the first to be gobbled up by AI. If you go to a top school, it truly does not matter what you major in. Most of those kids who want top jobs in tech, finance, consulting will get them. Majoring in something skill-based is more important if you attend even a slightly lower-ranked school. This is why people work so hard to secure spots in the Ivy-plus schools.
Again the data doesn't agree with your imagination.
Harvard english major 4 year out median salary = $49,675
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/school/?166027-Harvard-University&fos_code=2301&fos_credential=3
Anonymous wrote:I dont know where all the CS grads are. DoD contractors are hiring and cant get enough good candidates. All the good ones are making bank at amazon etc but we need citizens who are ok with under $90k for first job but can also actually do things and didnt sleep through their CS and math classes.
They did some interesting projects, and won an award for said project. I think CS majors cannot sit on their laurels and expect a good paying job. Like with most grads, they need to hustle, get interships, work on projects (though most majors don't require this; DC was saying how business majors were luckier in that they don't have to work on projects in the summer along with internships).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are English majors in high demand?
Actually, yes. The future is bright for humanities majors.
For low paying jobs.
https://www.cnbc.com/2024/03/14/here-are-college-majors-with-the-highest-and-lowest-rate-of-return.html
College majors with the highest and lowest return
A recent study published in the American Educational Research Journal found that engineering and computer science majors provide the highest returns in lifetime earnings, followed by business, health, and math and science majors. Education and humanities majors and arts majors had the lowest returns of the 10 fields of study considered.
STEM, health and business majors are among the highest-paying, leading to average annual wages that are higher at the entry level and significantly greater over the course of a career compared with liberal arts and humanities majors.
Adjusted for college rank?
Anthro majors at Dartmouth do not equal anthro majors at UMD
sure, but even so, an anthro major at Dartmouth, is not going to have an easy time finding a job compared to a CS or business major from a T50.
I almost minored in anthro; I think it's a very interesting field, but hard to find a good paying job.
I think one of the most popular majors at Dartmouth is anthropology and a lot of kids get jobs at investment banks. It’s a known thing there….
Outcome for English major at Dartmouth is not good at all
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/school/?182670-Dartmouth-College&fos_code=2301&fos_credential=3
$55730
Lower than the median for the Catholic University of America at $76452.
Yikes.
I suspect the anthropology story is false or it's a rare weird tradition developed at Dartmouth for that particular major.
I'd like to see the ^PP's Anthro stats from Dartmouth.
https://www.collegefactual.com/colleges/dartmouth-college/academic-life/academic-majors/social-sciences/anthropology/
How Much Do Anthropology Graduates from Dartmouth Make?
$44,153 Bachelor's Median Salary
https://www.collegefactual.com/majors/social-sciences/anthropology/rankings/most-focused/bachelors-degrees/new-england/new-hampshire/
Across New Hampshire, there were 143 anthropology graduates with average earnings and debt of $34,339 and $21,176 respectively. At the bachelor’s degree level specifically, there were 143 anthropology graduates with average earnings and debt of $40,795 and $24,203 respectively.
$24K in debt with a salary lower than the median income of the US, which includes not college educated? That's a really bad ROI.
Who's spreading the fake news?
I suspect the prestige whores.
I don't know about others, but I would definitely go with the data and information.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why we need entrepreneurs to create more of the jobs your kids want.
Being an entrepreneur is too hard for most people. I say this as an owner with 50 employees and $26M in sales last year. People want the success without the risk and pain. Honestly, most people are basic and want a steady paycheck for minimal effort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just returned from a college reunion, and my friends' kids who majored in CS and graduated last year and this year are all un- or under-employed. It seems pretty obvious to me that low-level CS jobs are the first to be gobbled up by AI. If you go to a top school, it truly does not matter what you major in. Most of those kids who want top jobs in tech, finance, consulting will get them. Majoring in something skill-based is more important if you attend even a slightly lower-ranked school. This is why people work so hard to secure spots in the Ivy-plus schools.
Again the data doesn't agree with your imagination.
Harvard english major 4 year out median salary = $49,675
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/school/?166027-Harvard-University&fos_code=2301&fos_credential=3
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are English majors in high demand?
Actually, yes. The future is bright for humanities majors.
For low paying jobs.
https://www.cnbc.com/2024/03/14/here-are-college-majors-with-the-highest-and-lowest-rate-of-return.html
College majors with the highest and lowest return
A recent study published in the American Educational Research Journal found that engineering and computer science majors provide the highest returns in lifetime earnings, followed by business, health, and math and science majors. Education and humanities majors and arts majors had the lowest returns of the 10 fields of study considered.
STEM, health and business majors are among the highest-paying, leading to average annual wages that are higher at the entry level and significantly greater over the course of a career compared with liberal arts and humanities majors.
Adjusted for college rank?
Anthro majors at Dartmouth do not equal anthro majors at UMD
sure, but even so, an anthro major at Dartmouth, is not going to have an easy time finding a job compared to a CS or business major from a T50.
I almost minored in anthro; I think it's a very interesting field, but hard to find a good paying job.
I think one of the most popular majors at Dartmouth is anthropology and a lot of kids get jobs at investment banks. It’s a known thing there….
Outcome for English major at Dartmouth is not good at all
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/school/?182670-Dartmouth-College&fos_code=2301&fos_credential=3
$55730
Lower than the median for the Catholic University of America at $76452.
Yikes.
I suspect the anthropology story is false or it's a rare weird tradition developed at Dartmouth for that particular major.
I'd like to see the ^PP's Anthro stats from Dartmouth.
https://www.collegefactual.com/colleges/dartmouth-college/academic-life/academic-majors/social-sciences/anthropology/
How Much Do Anthropology Graduates from Dartmouth Make?
$44,153 Bachelor's Median Salary
https://www.collegefactual.com/majors/social-sciences/anthropology/rankings/most-focused/bachelors-degrees/new-england/new-hampshire/
Across New Hampshire, there were 143 anthropology graduates with average earnings and debt of $34,339 and $21,176 respectively. At the bachelor’s degree level specifically, there were 143 anthropology graduates with average earnings and debt of $40,795 and $24,203 respectively.
$24K in debt with a salary lower than the median income of the US, which includes not college educated? That's a really bad ROI.
Anonymous wrote:Just returned from a college reunion, and my friends' kids who majored in CS and graduated last year and this year are all un- or under-employed. It seems pretty obvious to me that low-level CS jobs are the first to be gobbled up by AI. If you go to a top school, it truly does not matter what you major in. Most of those kids who want top jobs in tech, finance, consulting will get them. Majoring in something skill-based is more important if you attend even a slightly lower-ranked school. This is why people work so hard to secure spots in the Ivy-plus schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are English majors in high demand?
Actually, yes. The future is bright for humanities majors.
For low paying jobs.
https://www.cnbc.com/2024/03/14/here-are-college-majors-with-the-highest-and-lowest-rate-of-return.html
College majors with the highest and lowest return
A recent study published in the American Educational Research Journal found that engineering and computer science majors provide the highest returns in lifetime earnings, followed by business, health, and math and science majors. Education and humanities majors and arts majors had the lowest returns of the 10 fields of study considered.
STEM, health and business majors are among the highest-paying, leading to average annual wages that are higher at the entry level and significantly greater over the course of a career compared with liberal arts and humanities majors.
Adjusted for college rank?
Anthro majors at Dartmouth do not equal anthro majors at UMD
sure, but even so, an anthro major at Dartmouth, is not going to have an easy time finding a job compared to a CS or business major from a T50.
I almost minored in anthro; I think it's a very interesting field, but hard to find a good paying job.
I think one of the most popular majors at Dartmouth is anthropology and a lot of kids get jobs at investment banks. It’s a known thing there….
Outcome for English major at Dartmouth is not good at all
https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/school/?182670-Dartmouth-College&fos_code=2301&fos_credential=3
$55730
Lower than the median for the Catholic University of America at $76452.
Yikes.
I suspect the anthropology story is false or it's a rare weird tradition developed at Dartmouth for that particular major.
How Much Do Anthropology Graduates from Dartmouth Make?
$44,153 Bachelor's Median Salary
Across New Hampshire, there were 143 anthropology graduates with average earnings and debt of $34,339 and $21,176 respectively. At the bachelor’s degree level specifically, there were 143 anthropology graduates with average earnings and debt of $40,795 and $24,203 respectively.
Anonymous wrote:Just returned from a college reunion, and my friends' kids who majored in CS and graduated last year and this year are all un- or under-employed. It seems pretty obvious to me that low-level CS jobs are the first to be gobbled up by AI. If you go to a top school, it truly does not matter what you major in. Most of those kids who want top jobs in tech, finance, consulting will get them. Majoring in something skill-based is more important if you attend even a slightly lower-ranked school. This is why people work so hard to secure spots in the Ivy-plus schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why we need entrepreneurs to create more of the jobs your kids want.
Being an entrepreneur is too hard for most people. I say this as an owner with 50 employees and $26M in sales last year. People want the success without the risk and pain. Honestly, most people are basic and want a steady paycheck for minimal effort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's good that they're not expanding the seats. My English major found a good high-paying job quite easily out of school, but I know there are not clearly established paths for those majors as there are (or at least used to be) for CS majors.
Please share firm and $.
I won't name the firm but it's a large consulting firm with quantitative focus. Salary is around $90k. I agree with the advice to go to the best school you can get into, do as well as you can in that school, and don't accept the notion that you are limited by your major. My English major also took math, econ, government, etc, so firms knew she could do the work.
Great advice.
And hustle. Wherever you are.
I’ve already help DS research the clubs/teams to join at Ivy - will be freshman in fall.
The parenting job doesn’t end once they get in to a top college or program. It shifts and changes. Now they need life & career advice. Show them where to look, questions to ask, clubs to join, people to meet.
I know this is much harder with introverts….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a liberal arts degree (economics and something soft) from the highest ranked school you can.
Recruiting for finance, consulting, and corporate /strategy roles are much much easier if you are in English and economics major coming from Rice or Vanderbilt or Emory compared to CS at Purdue…..
Ask around people!!!
Unless you have good connections/networking, that will not help.
DS will graduate from an Ivy, commencement is today, and he is still looking for for a job, as most of his friends who don't have connections. Those with connections have good jobs.