Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Women's studies - what does one do with a degree in Women's studies? How many people have to die and free up a job for someone else?
Political science, I can see.
Sadly, my daughter went PolySci/Women's Studies as well. Hopefully she will go to law school which hopefully would be a bit more marketable.
I double majored in public policy and women's studies and now have a flourishing career in management consulting. I've always been interested in strategy work so this seemed like a natural next step after I decided against law school. Net 200k annually. So don't lose all hope!
The pp needs to state which school you came from. If you came from the
Ivies or top schools you can major in basket weaving and still get a management consulting or finance job. The schools that op is looking for don't fit that description. Additionally I suspect your public policy degree was of more value than your women's studies degree.
The opposite is true. "Public policy" as a professional degree doesn't mean much. Most people who are actually in public policy have law degrees or economics or something substantive. Women's studies, however, would require the kind of reading, writing, analysis of any liberal arts degree and so would provide actual skills. I say this as someone who majored in public policy and got a law degree. I wish I had done something more substantive as a undergraduate.
And I say this as someone who worked in finance and management consulting. No one will have picked up the women's studies resume as someone worthy of consideration but the public policy/political science major if from a top school and with high gps may have been considered initially for recruitment
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Women's studies - what does one do with a degree in Women's studies? How many people have to die and free up a job for someone else?
Political science, I can see.
Sadly, my daughter went PolySci/Women's Studies as well. Hopefully she will go to law school which hopefully would be a bit more marketable.
I double majored in public policy and women's studies and now have a flourishing career in management consulting. I've always been interested in strategy work so this seemed like a natural next step after I decided against law school. Net 200k annually. So don't lose all hope!
The pp needs to state which school you came from. If you came from the
Ivies or top schools you can major in basket weaving and still get a management consulting or finance job. The schools that op is looking for don't fit that description. Additionally I suspect your public policy degree was of more value than your women's studies degree.
The opposite is true. "Public policy" as a professional degree doesn't mean much. Most people who are actually in public policy have law degrees or economics or something substantive. Women's studies, however, would require the kind of reading, writing, analysis of any liberal arts degree and so would provide actual skills. I say this as someone who majored in public policy and got a law degree. I wish I had done something more substantive as a undergraduate.
OP, why would you give two cents about an anonymous person behind an anonymous keyboard making no contribution to your life other than being an empty loudmouth.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people saying that a Women's Studies degree sets you up for a job as a barista or life on the streets are spouting nonsense. A high-preforming student in ANY major can get many types of job. A C or B student will have a harder time.
First of all, bullshit, and second of all, you are more likely to get a good job in a good career field if you don't major in something stupid and worthless like Women's Studies.
What does a Women's Studies degree say to any employer?
"I am a strident unattractive ideologue who is incapable of studying anything intellectually serious and who will sue you at the drop of a hat over an imaginary grievance."
Yeah that's who I want to hire!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Women's studies - what does one do with a degree in Women's studies? How many people have to die and free up a job for someone else?
Political science, I can see.
Sadly, my daughter went PolySci/Women's Studies as well. Hopefully she will go to law school which hopefully would be a bit more marketable.
I double majored in public policy and women's studies and now have a flourishing career in management consulting. I've always been interested in strategy work so this seemed like a natural next step after I decided against law school. Net 200k annually. So don't lose all hope!
The pp needs to state which school you came from. If you came from the
Ivies or top schools you can major in basket weaving and still get a management consulting or finance job. The schools that op is looking for don't fit that description. Additionally I suspect your public policy degree was of more value than your women's studies degree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Women's studies - what does one do with a degree in Women's studies? How many people have to die and free up a job for someone else?
Political science, I can see.
Sadly, my daughter went PolySci/Women's Studies as well. Hopefully she will go to law school which hopefully would be a bit more marketable.
I double majored in public policy and women's studies and now have a flourishing career in management consulting. I've always been interested in strategy work so this seemed like a natural next step after I decided against law school. Net 200k annually. So don't lose all hope!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Women's studies - what does one do with a degree in Women's studies? How many people have to die and free up a job for someone else?
Political science, I can see.
Sadly, my daughter went PolySci/Women's Studies as well. Hopefully she will go to law school which hopefully would be a bit more marketable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people saying that a Women's Studies degree sets you up for a job as a barista or life on the streets are spouting nonsense. A high-preforming student in ANY major can get many types of job. A C or B student will have a harder time.
First of all, bullshit, and second of all, you are more likely to get a good job in a good career field if you don't major in something stupid and worthless like Women's Studies.
What does a Women's Studies degree say to any employer?
"I am a strident unattractive ideologue who is incapable of studying anything intellectually serious and who will sue you at the drop of a hat over an imaginary grievance."
Yeah that's who I want to hire!
Wow. This is why there needs to be Women Studies.
I'd provide this feedback in a more positive manner, but indeed, as a potential employer, I can think of dozens of degrees more appealing than Woman Studies (or Men Studies, if they exist).
What, you wouldn't listen to some shrill harpy screaming about "the patriarchy" all the time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A liberal arts education is not a job training school -- and thank God for it. An education is never a waste.
People (or one sock puppet poster) need to calm down. It's not your kid so why the hell does it mean so much to you?
+1 I actually think it is one tiresome poster.
Anonymous wrote:A liberal arts education is not a job training school -- and thank God for it. An education is never a waste.
People (or one sock puppet poster) need to calm down. It's not your kid so why the hell does it mean so much to you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people saying that a Women's Studies degree sets you up for a job as a barista or life on the streets are spouting nonsense. A high-preforming student in ANY major can get many types of job. A C or B student will have a harder time.
First of all, bullshit, and second of all, you are more likely to get a good job in a good career field if you don't major in something stupid and worthless like Women's Studies.
What does a Women's Studies degree say to any employer?
"I am a strident unattractive ideologue who is incapable of studying anything intellectually serious and who will sue you at the drop of a hat over an imaginary grievance."
Yeah that's who I want to hire!
I'd provide this feedback in a more positive manner, but indeed, as a potential employer, I can think of dozens of degrees more appealing than Woman Studies (or Men Studies, if they exist).
I agree. As a hiring partner, women's studies major spells PITA and potential lawsuits to me. I would avoid like the plague. And I would question the judgment of the parents and child for spending $60 - $70K a year to study gender or women's studies. Give me a good econ. or poli-sci major. Or history. At least then I know they can write.
What, you wouldn't listen to some shrill harpy screaming about "the patriarchy" all the time?