JM Aggie08
Diamond Member
- Jan 3, 2006
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I'm at the top of the list. Great.
Buddy's wife graduated with a BBA in MGT, and got hired on as a store director for a large grocery chain @ 65k. Don't feel down!
I'm at the top of the list. Great.
meh, I've used my degree in every job I've had.
I came in here to question why MBAs were on that list, oops.
My brother has a Bachelors in Phsyics, and he's been pulling weeds since he graduated. Told him when he started that program too that he'd have trouble finding a job after. He insisted he was going to get a government research job easily right after graduation . . . I think he might have swallowed the recruiters sales pitch.

? I'm not sure why you think a nursing degree is a good way to get in to med school.Yeah I know. There's a BBA, and here in Canada we have a BCom (commerce). BComs are a great way to go if you get one from a good school.
If an MBA is like an MD, then a BCom is like a nursing degree - good job prospects, and is a good way to get into med school. You do lose out on the variety of doing something else for undergrad though.
Well, that does make sense for that type of company, but if he was CFO of Microsoft, he'd probably have a very different view since much of the company is "very specialized and technical".My uncle is CFO to a large insurance multinational, and he swears to me that (except for some very specialised and technical vacancies) he doesn't give a hoot what subject an applicant studied at university.
Well, my friend went to an arts and drama oriented school. He then changed subjects but a lot of his ex-classmates now have steady acting jobs, including a few that have been in national primetime TV shows, etc. If that's what you want to do, and are willing to give it a shot, then by all means.One of my best friends growing up has a Masters in Theater Arts. He works as a stock manager for a plumbing supply company. Your choices for that degree are pretty much:
1) A job that requires a nameplate on your chest
2) A job teaching others to get a Theater Arts degree
Some people have a delusion that it will get them on Broadway or something, when in fact getting gigs like that is pretty much a mixture of natural talent and pure luck.
? I'm not sure why you think a nursing degree is a good way to get in to med school.
it's an investment (money and time) and people want to see a return, I don't think that's bad.Granted, I feel way too much emphasis is now placed on how much work you can get with the degree you have.
accounting is like prostitution. Relatively easy, pays well, no one wants to do it.
Applied Physics should be up there. My wife majored in it and has been getting turned down left and right. Unless you continue on to get your Masters or PhD then it's useless.
it's an investment (money and time) and people want to see a return, I don't think that's bad.
I think most people look at college the wrong way; they view a degree as job training. Articles like this only serve to reinforce that.
WHen I was going to school in the UC system it was fairly widely known that there were two differences between UC and CSU: the admissions requirements (duh) and the focus of the curriculum. UC was intended to be a theory-based curriculum and CSU was intended to be a practice-based curriculum. That's why at my alma mater, UC Davis, there were no programs for things like accountancy or teaching. Those programs are practice-based; you teach someone the rules of accounting and they become an accountant. At the UC schools the curriculum was more theory-based and focused on critical thinking; you teach someone the theory of finance and critical thinking and they can devise a financial system that the accountants then adapt to.
Many degrees, even from practice-based institutions, are really critical thinking degrees. I mean, seriously, who goes into philosophy thinking that they will get a job sitting around and philosophising all day? No, it's more about the critical thinking skills you learn while studying philosophy that are important and it's up to the student to apply them to the career field that interests them.
accounting is like prostitution. Relatively easy, pays well, no one wants to do it.
