En kötü bölümlere ilişkin görüşleriniz.

2025, okul ABD’de yaşıyor kendim için hızla yaklaşıyor.

Kariyer geliri, sınıf zorluğu, kendini geliştirme/etki, gelecekteki etki (öğrenci borcu, AI yapabilir mi?) Ve söz konusu ana dalla kariyer yapmanın ne kadar zor olduğu en kötü bölümleriniz nedir.

Tabii ki onlar da başka nedenler. Bunu her yıl üniversite bölümleri arasındaki alaka düzeyinin değişimini izlemek için özellikle AI gibi şeylerle yapmak istiyorum.

Etiketler:

9 Yorum

  1. nicolemarfer
    AÄŸustos 12, 2025 - 2:21 am

    I’m going to say something that might not be as popular. I don’t think it matters. I went to school for philosophy and religious studies. Everyone told me I would be broke. I currently work at an AI company and have spent years in tech. I’ve got a good job. I have a job that I’m happy to work at. I didn’t struggle as much as anyone said I would. In my spare time I self-publish philosophical books. Pick what makes you happy. You can align yourself to your dream field one day. Fields are constantly changing anyways. It’s not as hard as you might think to move into a new industry.

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  2. Quinjet
    AÄŸustos 12, 2025 - 2:21 am

    My hot take is that a lot of “useless” majors are okay if you have some kind of game plan going in. Doing the bare minimum to get a bachelor’s in psychology isn’t going to open a lot of doors anymore, but if you can strategically complete internships, research assistantships, teaching assistantships, etc. and make connections with professors, that’s going to get you a lot farther.

    In general, I think you need to make sure that you are able to bring something to the table that AI can’t. If you use AI to cheat your way through school, then there’s no reason to hire you for anything other than physical labor instead of just using AI. You need to develop actual critical thinking skills.

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  3. Direct-Procedure5814
    AÄŸustos 12, 2025 - 2:21 am

    That’s a hard one. As of right now here are the majors as far as unemployment. I was surprised Physics were number two. Computer Science is dropping fast. A lot of that is greedy companies not taking the best U.S. talent and going with 5 people from India and 9 from Egypt or Turkey. It hard because America has by far the best talent and schools but outsourcing lower quality talent is the theme of the day.

    Here are the top ones: 
    1 Anthropology (9.4%) 
    2 Physics (7.8%)
    3 Computer Engineering (7.5%)
    4 Commercial Art and Graphic Design (7.2%)
    5 Fine Arts (7%) 

    All five of those are at 7% or higher for unemployment rate, with Sociology, Computer Science and Chemistry all above 6%. 

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  4. ctierra512
    AÄŸustos 12, 2025 - 2:21 am

    As a journalism major that’s what most people say but all the journalism majors I know are employed lol

    I would say any major is bad if you don’t know how to write or talk to people

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  5. VampArcher
    AÄŸustos 12, 2025 - 2:21 am

    Any of them that don’t directly correlate with many actual careers. I don’t think any degree is worthless, but some you definitely have to work harder to get opportunities with.

    For example, history. There’s only so many opportunities that have anything to do with history, unless you then pursue a 4 year degree to become a history teacher, it by itself isn’t going to really do much for you, at least towards getting any job related to history.

    Computer science is only a bad choice because so many people have that degree.

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  6. Wisco_Disco1
    AÄŸustos 12, 2025 - 2:21 am

    I went to school for TV and Video. Worked in TV 4 years. I wouldn’t recommend it, but I’ve done okay.

    Theatre (performance)…RUN if you weren’t born loaded. I know successful people in the arts, but a degree is a recipe for disaster. If you get successful, you got very lucky/had connections/right place right time.

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  7. Glittering-Target-87
    AÄŸustos 12, 2025 - 2:21 am

    Criminal justice, art, finance.

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  8. LSBrigade
    AÄŸustos 12, 2025 - 2:21 am

    It depends. Generally speaking, humanities and art majors tend to have the worse job trends. Then, social science majors. After that, it can either be a business major or STEM major depending on which field you choose to major in (e.g., biology degrees are tough to branch out and make good money unless you live in a city/state/country that has a lot of funding for your research and you go for a master’s degree or a PhD; a focus in statistics helps too). A general business degree like business administration might be harder to find jobs than a major in accounting or finance.

    However, even with a major that does not have the best outcomes can still help you obtain a good career path if you know how to network well, take advantage of relevant internships, and ensure to connect with professors who can assist you with obtaining a trainee position related to your career of choice. I have a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice, which helped me get my first investigator trainee job at my current state government department six years ago. Three years later, I got promoted to Investigator 2 in a different niche investigative field at the same state government department, but at a different division. I then got promoted again last year in another higher investigator title at a different division. I also obtained my MPA degree back in May of this year. I am now going to be making $84k a year (and six years ago, I started at around $42k a year).

    So, it is not impossible to have a good career with a non-STEM degree.

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  9. PurplePenguin37
    AÄŸustos 12, 2025 - 2:21 am

    Most humanities and arts majors. I regretted majoring in music and minored in metaphysics in college. I changed my program and got a business degree. It was boring AF and I hated every second of school, but I got a better paying job afterward.

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