(I have a liberal arts degree. Two, in fact. And I had a job before I finished undergrad.)
I realize I'm a bit of an outlier, but don't let people tell you it's not possible.
(I have a liberal arts degree. Two, in fact. And I had a job before I finished undergrad.)
I realize I'm a bit of an outlier, but don't let people tell you it's not possible.
I mean at my university all the sciences and math were part of the liberal arts college and I believe technically liberal arts degrees.
Yeah people who have opinions on things based on a couple words used to describe it should maybe go to college to learn something.
I don't want to be rude but I do always wonder what the point of taking arts degrees is in this day and age. If you're passionate about some art you can still follow and practice it along with your STEM studies, it's not like most pro/successful artists were formally trained from teenage. Why set back your chances of making decent money?
i have a genuine passion for literature and studying it, learned a great deal about critical thinking and analysis. the stem subjects bore me to tears and furthermore i have no talent for them. if i lived my life thinking solely about maximising my earnings then i'd be very depressed.
You chances of being miserable out of poverty would be way more though, if you're not already well-endowed. You may not want so much to maximise your earnings, but you definitely don't want to get stuck in a poverty cycle because of having an expensive non-marketable degree.
I should add at this point I'm English. Student loans work a lot differently here, they're written off completely if you've not paid them back after a certain age. You also don't start paying them until you begin earning a certain amount.
Or get a CS degree that still doesn't get you a job like me because everyone wants someone with 6+ years experience at entry level. Also I suck.
Replace CS -> EE and you got me.