What's your Major?

i volunteer at the hospital pharmacy and i think i love it

but then again ive never had a job before but i still really enjoy being there and doing all that crap they do

like all my friends are gonna be nurses but i guess its like a filipino thing

well, it's good you like it. just thought i'd ask to make sure. i know a few people that didn't work in one, went to school for it, graduated and then hated it. good luck with it though. pharmacology is no walk in the park.
 
Good lookin out, I appericate it when others are willing to share their experience.

An add on Question "Where do you think/know you will be in 5 years?"

Sorry bored and if anyone wants to ask questions I'll edit my first post and put'em there.
 
Aviation maintenance and Aviation management

^^^
Do I smell Embry-Riddle Aeronautical Univ?

A.S. Aviation Technology
B.S. Professional Aeronautics w/ minors in Management and Safety

Currently half way done with my Master of Aeronautical Science degree with specializations in Human Factors and Space Studies.
 
geography major - business minor

yeah, i know, they dont seem to go tegether very well.

im working on GIS/Cartography as my area of specialty. i plan on being a consultant when i graduate and the business is just to help me for when i hope to start my own consulting firm
 
Major: Math
Minor: Asian American Studies
Graduated: Dec 2006

Currently:
A seismic pre processor and geo tech for a oil and gas exploration co
 
Major: English with a Professional Writing concentration
Graduate: May!!!!! (finally...)
In five years: who knows? Hopefully I'll be working in publishing or a career of the like. As long as I enjoy where I'm working, the actual title doesn't much matter.
 
currently a HLES (Health Leisure and Exercise Science) major, but thinking of pulling a 180 and going to Resort and Hospitality Management.

in 5 yrs i want to be stable financially and be able to live comfortably.
 
Senior - 4 months baby!

Major(s): Aerospace Engineering (primary), Ocean Engineering - think Naval Architecture + Marine Engineering (secondary)
Minor(s): Mathematics and Economics

I'm graduating in May and I've already sealed a position with GE - Aviation for one of their Master's/Co-op programs. In three years I'll have my MS in AE and another year from that I'll have my PE license.


Good to see some other aero guys here!
 
Well you did say what your major "was" as well as "is"...

Computer Science, but that was so long ago it hardly matters :)

In 5 years I hope I'm
- still alive
- done paying for my kids' college
- liking my job a little more than now
 
Graduated with a degree in English Education with a minor in English
Currently in graduate school for English Ed., hoping to have my master's by the end of the summer
 
Wow we do have an array of different majors, and seems like Engineering, especially Aeronautical is popular.

I'm sure as time goes by "downtube" you'll enjoy your job more, just like women and wine with time it just gets better...i suppose?
 
Currently studying undergrad Electrical Engineering. Also doing a Biomedical Engineering option which I am currently reconsidering...

My, we have some smart kids on this forum. =)
 
Fresh out of H.S. in 1992 I was going for a B.F.A. (Bach. Fine Arts) in Musical Theater.
...Within a week, I realized just how unprepared I was for what was essentially a double major in acting and music, and switched to the B.A. Theater, acting focus.
...By semester break, I'd learned how much more fun it was to run the show and switched to the B.A. Theater, Tech.
...By the end of that year, I realized I wasn't going to be working in theater, and left college.

~2 years later, I went back and got an A.S. in Recreation and Parks from my local Community Col. I got into riding bikes and started working at a bike shop. Once I got the AS, I went on to Radford U. to get my B.A. in same. Realized I didn't want to be a babysitter for the rest of my life and left college again after a year. Did some other stuff, and went back to working in a bike shop.

Several years later got into a co-op program which paired the local CC with Ford and started going to school to be a mechanic. Also did the auto body and collision repair certificate program at the same time. Learned some stuff, did some work on cars, found out it wasn't as much as working on my own car, got royally ****** over by my Ford dealership, dropped out of the program in the middle of a semester and never looked back. Finished the auto body program, got a job at a bike shop.

Now, at 33, with a wife and a kid, I'm at UGA working on a History degree while my wife is going to Law School here. I'm a super-senior, but I still need one more language class and two electives after this semester, which I will probably take this summer through the University's distance learning program. We're going to move back to Virginia, and I'll probably get a job managing a bike shop!

So, 4 schools, 8 majors and 16 years later, what have I learned from all of this?

1. Stay in school, college kids. Even if you hate it, even if you have no idea why you're there, just finish it up the first time, and save yourself a lot of re-taking stupid s*** that didn't transfer from school to school.
2. College isn't for everyone.
3. It's not even remotely important what your major is, unless it's the sort of specific degree that trains you for a specific job field.
4. Picking a degree based on a career field you think you'd like to work in, but have no experience working in, is a bad idea. You may get into the classes and realize that you have no actual interest in the work, and now you've wasted at least a semester, possibly more, and have to back track.
5. Rather than spending all this time and money on college, I should have gotten an Associates in business and just opened my own bike shop 10 years ago.
6. Math is hard. College math is pointless and hard. ;)
 
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1. Stay in school, college kids. Even if you hate it, even if you have no idea why you're there, just finish it up the first time, and save yourself a lot of re-taking stupid s*** that didn't transfer from school to school.
2. College isn't for everyone.
3. It's not even remotely important what you major is, unless it's the sort of specific degree that trains you for a specific job field.
4. Picking a degree based on a career field you think you'd like to work in, but have no experience working in, is a bad idea. You may get into the classes and realize that you have no actual interest in the work, and now you've wasted at least a semester, possibly more, and have to back track.
5. Rather than spending all this time and money on college, I should have gotten an Associates in business and just opened my own bike shop 10 years ago.
6. Math is hard. College math is pointless and hard. ;)

lot of truth there. too bad advice is lost on the young ;)
 
Fresh out of H.S. in 1992 I was going for a B.F.A. (Bach. Fine Arts) in Musical Theater.
...Within a week, I realized just how unprepared I was for what was essentially a double major in acting and music, and switched to the B.A. Theater, acting focus.
...By semester break, I'd learned how much more fun it was to run the show and switched to the B.A. Theater, Tech.
...By the end of that year, I realized I wasn't going to be working in theater, and left college.

~2 years later, I went back and got an A.S. in Recreation and Parks from my local Community Col. I got into riding bikes and started working at a bike shop. Once I got the AS, I went on to Radford U. to get my B.A. in same. Realized I didn't want to be a babysitter for the rest of my life and left college again after a year. Did some other stuff, and went back to working in a bike shop.

Several years later got into a co-op program which paired the local CC with Ford and started going to school to be a mechanic. Also did the auto body and collision repair certificate program at the same time. Learned some stuff, did some work on cars, found out it wasn't as much as working on my own car, got royally ****** over by my Ford dealership, dropped out of the program in the middle of a semester and never looked back. Finished the auto body program, got a job at a bike shop.

Now, at 33, with a wife and a kid, I'm at UGA working on a History degree while my wife is going to Law School here. I'm a super-senior, but I still need one more language class and two electives after this semester, which I will probably take this summer through the University's distance learning program. We're going to move back to Virginia, and I'll probably get a job managing a bike shop!

So, 4 schools, 8 majors and 16 years later, what have I learned from all of this?

1. Stay in school, college kids. Even if you hate it, even if you have no idea why you're there, just finish it up the first time, and save yourself a lot of re-taking stupid s*** that didn't transfer from school to school.
2. College isn't for everyone.
3. It's not even remotely important what your major is, unless it's the sort of specific degree that trains you for a specific job field.
4. Picking a degree based on a career field you think you'd like to work in, but have no experience working in, is a bad idea. You may get into the classes and realize that you have no actual interest in the work, and now you've wasted at least a semester, possibly more, and have to back track.
5. Rather than spending all this time and money on college, I should have gotten an Associates in business and just opened my own bike shop 10 years ago.
6. Math is hard. College math is pointless and hard. ;)


Ditto with downtube, a lot of good info for us young peeps. Good luck on your classes in the Summer and your move.
 
6. Math is hard. College math is pointless and hard. ;)

it's not hard... it's just like you said for that college is not for everybody. BUT, it's pointless.... 14 college math classes later, and i dont use any of it
 
I graduated with a BA in Communications.

Now I'm a marketing manager. I'm actually using my degree, who would've thought. (cabpatch)
 
geography major - business minor

yeah, i know, they dont seem to go tegether very well.

im working on GIS/Cartography as my area of specialty. i plan on being a consultant when i graduate and the business is just to help me for when i hope to start my own consulting firm

SWEET!!!(cabpatch)

That's what i'm doing!!!
I got my AA in Criminal Justice, and am now a Junior at UW-L majoring in Geography with a GIS concentration!

I work at USGS as an intern currently, but still trying to find out where i want to go...my dream job is the DEA or FBI, but we'll see...

(hey...uh, let me know when you start up that business of yours:D...i want to live where it never snows again!!!)
 

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