Hmm. Odd they combined mathematics and Computer Science. I find it hard to believe the unemployment rate for Comp Sci is bad tbh
What not to study: The 20 college majors with the highest unemployment rates
20. International Relations
19. Visual and Performing Arts
18. Commercial art and Graphic Design
17. Foreign language
16. Industrial production technologies
15. Industrial and organizational psychology
14. Composition and rhetoric
13. Mathematics and computer science
12. United States history
11. Fine arts
10. Communication technologies
9. Actuarial science
8. Public policy
7. Drama and theater arts
6. Miscellaneous fine arts
5. Mass media
4. Film video and photographic arts
3. Materials engineering and materials science
2. Cognitive science and biopsychology
1. Petroleum Engineering
Hmm. Odd they combined mathematics and Computer Science. I find it hard to believe the unemployment rate for Comp Sci is bad tbh
Computer science? Actuarial science? Petroleum engineering? What kind of crack is that writer on
Horrible list tbh. So many unemployed English majors though. That should be tops, with History and Art History, as well as music majors (sadly).
What are you talking about?
Too many people jumped on the petroleum engineering bandwagon, tbh. I don't know the stats for the job market, but I know you can find a fresh graduate easier than a lot of other engineers
I can't imagine an 18-year-old ever saying that they are going to college for a public policy degree.
yeah... this is easily the dumbest list I've ever seen
It's almost impossible for a Music major to get a W2 job at all unless they double major in education and even then there's a lot more of a supply of these people than music teachers/band director vacancies in schools, so the compe ion is intense and plenty of people are left standing in the musical chairs game (pun intended).
yes, but #1 on the list over all the liberal arts and social "sciences" and such is just ridiculous. Last time I checked, PetE still has among the highest average starting salaries.
https://www.naceweb.org/job-market/c...neering-major/
You don’t know what you’re talking about.
Seems like you're the one, tbh.
There’s really no point in trying to show you why you’re wrong because you’ll just ignore it or change the subject. You should really do more research before you post. Using starting salary as a stand alone indicator of employment rates for all industries is flawed.
saying an Engineering major has worse job prospects out of college than a liberal arts or Music major is severely re ed.
tbh a lot of these majors are complete horse as 4 year degrees and really function as stopgaps before getting into a postgrad program
poly sci into law school is very common, for example. but wtf are you going to do with nothing but a poli sci degree? jack
We’re not talking about an engineering major in general but specifically, a petroleum engineer.
become a "community organizer"
become senator
pay people to change your birth certificate from Kenya to Hawaii
become president
?????
profit
Pet.E. is generally considered the cream of the engineering crop, civil engineering is usually considered the runt of the litter. Very few universities even offer Pet.E., even many large flagships in the US don't. I think for Texas it's either A&M or Tech, but most states are lucky to have one.
Who cares if it’s the cream of the crop. It’s employment in one of the most cyclical industries in the country. One where a downturn means 100,000+ jobs cut. And those never fully return. Technology also has enabled one person to do a job that used to take a whole staff.
Amyway, what’s your basis for disagreeing with the op? Surely you have some data.
obama went to harvard law school and got his JD
Andy quit quoting me, go pork your hamnbeast or soemthing before you clock out at bath and bodyworks
I don't disagree with that, but they do "return" at some point in an inflationary economy.
Obviously the job market for that was better before late 2014 when gas (in Texas, for example) went from $3.79 to close to 2 bucks.
I know Obama did..> I'm just saying what you can do with a poly sci degree as a completely non-professional type of worker and have great success. But of course that's an outlier. That post was intended to be a joke.
jesus christ those arts medians are atrocious
If you're lucky enough to even get a steady job. Many of those medians are teacher salaries. Because academia is often the only realistic career path for many of those.
1) No...all those jobs don’t return.
2) Petroleum engineer employment has very little to do with gas prices. Both are reactionary to oil and natural gas prices.
You need to stick to talking about things you understand. Hopefully one day you find what that is.
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