Originally posted by: amnesiac 2.0
Originally posted by: gopunk
i think you're going about it the wrong way... what do YOU love?
Exactly. The biggest pitfall is doing something that you "think" will be useful/in demand/what your parents want/etc. Most people find this out too late so I'm telling you now: DO WHAT
MAKES YOU HAPPY. If studying Eastern Philosophy is what you like, do that. Don't try to predict the job market. No one knows what it's going to be like for sure in a few years. In most industries major doesn't really matter either. The bulk of your talent should come from your work experience, the BA/BS is just icing on the cake. I.e. a graduate with little real experience is for the most part really educated, albeit useless.
I have a friend with a business degree. He sells cars because the job market is so bad in Southern Colorado.
My dad has a PhD in Religion but has never used it. He sells insurance.
I'm finishing up a BA in Psychology but I'm going to cook for a living.
But be ESPECIALLY sure you want to be an engineer if you take that route. There's nothing worse than being stuck doing that crap if you hate it. I almost made that mistake. (Former CSCI major)