Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Classics( Greek & Latin) is highest brow
YEY!!!![]()
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Anonymous wrote:Classics( Greek & Latin) is highest brow
Anonymous wrote:Major that can be either extremely highbrow or extremely lowbrow--religious studies. The classes look very different at the two extremes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:High brow - majors that do not lead to paying jobs. Things like art history or film. Trust fund kids can do them.
Low brow - jobs that lead to employment directly out of undergrad - nursing, respiratory therapist, etc.
Middle - engineering, [b]business[b], hard sciences, math - smart kid majors that eventually lead to jobs but the path is not direct.
I tend to think of undergrad business as low-brow because business majors have pretty low GMAT scores and so picking the major is a poorly informed choice. Like how legal studies majors don't have high average LSAT scores. If a major is mostly populated with kids who want to go on a path that requires a specific graduate degree, it should be preparing them better for admissions into that degree program.
Anonymous wrote:Nursing is one of the most demanding majors. Sciences plus clinicals. Most “high-brow” majors could never hack it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Low brow: education majors. Unfortunately the teaching profession just doesn’t have respect (which I think it should.)
High Brow: STEM/pre-med
Wrong; STEM/pre-med are decidedly middle brow bc In an increasingly corporate dominated economy, you will always be a worker bee.
Anonymous wrote:Low brow: education majors. Unfortunately the teaching profession just doesn’t have respect (which I think it should.)
High Brow: STEM/pre-med
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Undergrad nursing degree is lowbrow.
Basically the more immediately useful the coursework/the more it specifically prepares you for things you will literally be doing in your job (assuming your job is not academia), the lower-brow it is. Computer Science degree where you do a ton of theory and math: highbrow. CS degree where you get really good at coding: lowbrow.
Then we get into countersignaling, which is a whole ‘bother ball of wax.
I would agree with this, but I've often wondered, how did Engineering, Architecture, and Computer Science bypass this label?
Because nursing is a female dominated profession. Men typically pursued Engineering, architecture, CS, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Undergrad nursing degree is lowbrow.
Basically the more immediately useful the coursework/the more it specifically prepares you for things you will literally be doing in your job (assuming your job is not academia), the lower-brow it is. Computer Science degree where you do a ton of theory and math: highbrow. CS degree where you get really good at coding: lowbrow.
Then we get into countersignaling, which is a whole ‘bother ball of wax.
I would agree with this, but I've often wondered, how did Engineering, Architecture, and Computer Science bypass this label?