At first I was upset at philosophy not being included, but then I went down a thought rabbit hole ultimately concluding that it doesn't matter. Which I guess fits; as someone going into philosophy.
@@newwaveinfantry8362 it's partially her vibes too. she has the energy of an unbothered cat. i feel like she just looks and acts like if an american shorthair cat suddenly turned human. the same way british actress vicky mcclure feels like the human version of an oriental shorthair cat
same she was so real with that one lmaooooo Currently neglecting my classes doing indie game dev.... pls just let me out of architecture now... I just told one of my firends I have free time to hang out NEXT FEBRUARY
Girl, pls try *skedaddling* from out of that unless you want permanent brain fog (switched majors after attempting to pursue an architecture degree and my mind, body, and soul is utterly destroyed)
@@citexcode99 im in college idek for sure what i wanna do and know nothing but my advice is don't do something where you'll be miserable even if there's a ton of money😭
As a biology kid that currently studies medicine: she is right. Most med students would rather learn a 600 page book by heart in three days and recite it to the teacher word by word than actually use their brain and understand something.
The one about engineers making huge statements about other fields is actually so damn true. Im an EE and I swear the study library always has at least 3-4 engineers that actually do very little work while they're there but can ramble about uni degree politics forever and talk about how worth it one degree is over the other and more as if theyve taken those majors themselves
EE vs ME who would win. every. single. time. theres a never ending rivalry between eletrical and mechanical. who is the greatest? the most difficult? the only real engineering? EE duh (im in ee)
I have a friend who barely does any work in engineering and is holding on by a thread but also reminds my other friend who’s a painting major with a Gallery and with a business where he sells his art that, engendering will bring him more money in the long run. That may be true but you need to be a good engineer to be the top 1%.
Here I’ll do one for you guys!: If you’re a male nursing student you’re a gifted kid that never burned out or just someone with a lot of care for others who constantly forgets to care about themselves. You have infinite potential in your field but you’re often overlooked because of your gender.
I actually am okay with math but I got behind in math during Covid. I mainly thought English classes are fun to teach and I liked my high school English teachers. Now, I am starting to fear having to grade essays.
i studied linguistics and i love to imagine that people will ask how many languages i speak and then i will proceed to tell them about how linguistics is the study of human communication as a whole rather than any particular languages and then say the same thing in 6 languages, 4 of which are unintelligible but it doesn't matter, because no one i ever speak to is going to speak all 6 of the languages that i pretend to speak. also i love etymology and the pink trombone and the ipa chart website.
I love the ipa chart website! Sometimes, I'll just randomly pull it up, scroll through a random language wiki page, and see if I can pronounce all the phonemes found in that language. (Not a linguistics major, but linguistics was part of my minor. Unfortunately, I only speak 1.5 languages, and that's a bit of an overstatement with how little I actually practice that half language.)
Stem major with linguistics minor here. Understanding how many languages do not have the sounds in English and usually use a substitute helps me understand foreign English accents a lot better. In particular the “Th” sound, the “j” sound, and the second “L” sound (Noble versus Nobel).
I too, as a Linguistics major love how no one ever thinks about us because unless you have tangential experience tying Linguistics to the study of language, you tend to assume it's like psychology or something, and assume Linguistics is a competition to see who can speak the most languages. Historical linguistics is where it's at!
"linguistics is the study of human communication" Lol. Now i see why this field is stagnating in general, and, as exception, only transformers makes difference.
Comp sci major here….and yeah shockingly I don’t regret my choice 😂 I self studied code using tutorials for a while, had the time of my life, then decided I wanted to learn more. The only way to get a job in this field is by doing like a bajillion internships so hopefully you’d stand out amongst others. Either way, programming is fun af and I’d be happy doing it even if I wasn’t paid lol
I'm a comp sci major student too! I have always been told to learn "coding" in my free time, and that I don't need a degree, but I was so shocked to know that cs was way more than just coding, which made me feel better and worse in the same time lol
@oluchimuoguilim you take Math modules, like discrete math and logic, computer systems, where you study how computers actually operate, algorithms, which is the most related to coding but has bit more maths to it, networks and how the intrent works, also some colleges offer now AI modules where you study nueral networks and some stuff (haven't taken this yet) as well as cybersecurity.. In short. The other stuff is the theortical part that helps you understand computers more at the deep level, while coding, is just dealing with the surface if thats makes any sense
Lol the psychology one is kinda accurate but I think a lot of people fell into doing it because of being around people with mental health issues or they were dealing with it in their own life. I did it because of that! I knew some of my classmates who did it because they had a parent with schizophrenia. Many cases like that of people, theres two types, ones that have actually had psychology and the human condition affect their life and/or the people that didn't know what they wanted to study and its funny how I'm both!
This sounds very accurate, even as a CS major. I thought long and hard about doing psychology, but I am definitely not a people person. I grew up around so many people with mental health/life issues and am used to being the one family and friends would vent to. I myself find it hard to communicate with people but have been told id make a great therapist. Also loved psychology in high school
im neurodivergent with anxiety/depression/trauma (the basics) and have a family with a mix of these things so I went to psych because of that and also because I didn't know what to do cause an art degree is apparently worthless and I thought I can learn coding on my own
@@anisa2273 an art degree isn’t necessarily worthless but it is something that can be entirely self taught which makes it a bit of a waste of money. any degree can be worthless though if you never have a plan to apply it.
female engineering major here who loves humanities majors and doesn't think college is useless outside of STEM :') however i have met many guys in my major who have the exact mindset you're describing
The average life cycle of a premed students always ends up with them with a degree they can’t use because their GPA is too low for med school and they didn’t really get enough experience to get much use from it as a backup plan or they up in another program entirely like Psychology or something like that
@@tarecy1923 People who say this never look at the actual philosophy grad employment statistics (most of them end up in law or management, assuming they don't go into academia which is usually always the intention) They're legit the highest paid humanities degree unironically lmao (unless you consider architecture a humanities)
Actuarial science is a highly relevant and employable field of study and seems to be quite future proof, as It's used in businesses everywhere, tends to pay well and always has a market
@@AweSean-wv3xo only rich kids study philosophy dont they? At least thats how it is in my country (the philo majors are stereotyped to be quite bougie)
tbf most schools have a really terrible system where they teach you "how to teach" for like 4 freaking years then in the final semester you actually get to teach kids for the first time ever and then you find out you hate it and drop out.
@@Jwellsuhhuh at least here at Bates in the US where i study education (working on my certification) we have placements every semester working in classrooms from the first intro to education class until you leave, which is nice. also im a physics major lol
@@jfrederino that’s really good to hear. More schools should have at least offer some kind of practice teaching opportunities every semester or incorporate it into their classes better
13:00 Actuarial Major here. I was very surprised to not just be lumped in with the regular math people. And yes I do explain what an Actuary is at least once per month.
@@A_Professional422 You bastard. We price insurance premiums and do risk analysis in the context of insurance. A solid example would be calculating probability of someone's death to price a life insurance policy or calculating car accident probability, or estimating the damages of an accident based on someone's vehicle to price a car insurance policy.
I’m in med school and 100 percent agree that being smart is not really required to be in medicine. I used to think med students were extremely smart until I saw myself and my peers.
If it’s a pure maths degree it kinda is. It’s like the fine arts of the stem field. Not to say it isn't valuable. Just if you don't come from rich/supportive parents it's a risky move. Something I am planning for later in life.
@@Noname-ok4tf 😢but the work done by pure mathematicians is able to be used in practical applications after many years . it eventually has a "use", so i wouldn't say a pure math degree is worthless. plus pure math is the foundation for many stem subjects also are you implying fine arts degrees are useless? because the arts are very important for our societies. of course one could argue that you could do arts or math without the degree, but this could apply to many majors/degrees. you can be a programmer without a computer science degree. are computer science degrees useless then? maybe with over saturation in the job market, most degrees are becoming useless. anyway i believe a pure math degree or fine art degree is no more useless than any other degree . except maybe degrees you require to do a job like medicine or law also it would be unfair to call any degree worthless because any degree will teach you critical thinking and creativity, and will open your mind
@@fish-fy5sh yea i agree but she meant in the form of employability. Math degree only jobs is probably going to be some stock firm in wall street or cryptography and obviously academics. I really like math and i dont like how this is either but its reality
kinda spot on as medical student and yes, you just have to be hard working if you're in medicine. i think surgeons are extremely hard working and skilled. the smart ones according to me are the math and physics students
Agreed! Being somewhat intelligent certainly doesn't hurt, but it really comes down to a healthy dose of masochism and a willingness to give up your social life 🥲
I agree with your statement that med school is more endurance than raw intelligence, but you definitely need both to be at the top of your class. At the med school level, almost everyone is hardworking and above average in intelligence; if you’re a genius you will definitely stand out and have an easier time.
We have one meme account that is almost entirely dedicated to one professor, the stupid memes are probably a significant part of why not a higher percentage drops out
As a computer science major, yeah. When I was a kid, my schools would bring in presenters to tell us about what jobs we should do, and that the rate of the expansion of the CS field was far outstripping the number of professionals in computer science, but now that I'm in computer science, every company is like "yeah we have enough of your kind" and then i starve like I just really really wanted to learn about big O or whatever
Noooo never mention big O notation ever again! Still have flashbacks from my Data Structures class and I've been graduated early last year as a Japanese language major
@@retro_jonnyRecommend CS. I'm from applied statistics and math, currently studying data science. Learning about computer/programming is so so so useful.
You are right though about those workaholic majors like architecture because it's not fun to be a masochist but it is fun for other people to think you're a masochist
0:45 psychology... you watch reality tv, follow celebrity gossip and listen to real crime podcasts. You want to study psychology because you think it will allow you to analyze people in relationships and life. Instead, you find out just how many questionnaires and statistics are out thrre
As a geoscience student I feel very offended that my verrrrry important major wasn't mentionned. But I did relate with the chemistry and physics and environmental science part (though I don't really get why they should be more nihilist than others). Very cool video btw !
You nailed biology entirely, I’m here barely making rent while struggling to find anything I can do with my degree. I can also speak for music production, most of us are incredibly dorky
As a Computer Science Engineering student who wanted to be a filmmaker and is taking film electives, everything hit home. You nailed it. It’s almost creepy how much you nailed it.
1:45 in my defense, I knew this was gonna be like this, unfortunately not a lot of people who do go into it realize that the job is hell, but somehow it's still worth doing (and it is), but not everyone is "built" for veterinary stuff
As someone studying political science...I completely agree. The entire class its boring because were reading about old peoples opinions. But when a conspiracy theory is involved im very intrigued and listening. Also I wouldve loved to hear what you said at the beginning.
Lmao these were pretty spot on. As an engineering student I can't stand hearing other classmates talk about how much better engineering is compared to other majors. Like shut up Nelson, we aren't special
As a chemistry major (heavily leaning towards doing my concentration in environmental chemistry and potentially even minoring in environmental science) this is spot on for me in every way except that im not actually constantly on hikes or rock climbing. I just wish i was.
Mathematics major here (also minored in physics & statistics). As everyone here knows, mathematics is at the forefront of any hard stem field. Those who criticize mathematics as a major are just scared because many mathematicians steal their jobs. I'm currently working as an R&D scientist with the national geospatial intelligence agency while doing my phD in statistics. I have done consulting work, and worked with a team of engineers developing a mini rocket engine for their capstone project. I am also very creative, and I develop tools for my music (effects, synthesizers,..). I do some 3d animation for fun as well because I love 3d modeling. Since the exciting world of procedural animation is simply a set of differential equations with initial conditions it was very easy for me to get into it mechanically. For all the math majors out there, your degree is only "too theoretical" if you choose to not apply anything you've learned to anything that your or your potential employers are interested in. Either way, you can go to graduate school and become a researcher if you're mainly interested in the theoretical aspect. However, most math majors I know are interested in BOTH worlds and are therefore more employable than most hard science degrees simply because many math majors are creative and have the background needed to excel in most hard science fields. They just have to pick up some additional skills (minors, certificates, projects and so forth). Okay, my rant is over...
Yeah I’m also a math major. I mean, what you’re saying is that the minors, certificates, and projects are what are helpful… not the math degree. I don’t see many employers who value proofs lmao. I am certain that what you’ve learned about mathematics has been helpful to those endeavors, but alone doesn’t do much, as you said. I think the theme is here is that you can’t really do much with a math degree unless you make it your life or intend to do graduate school. In other words, a bachelors in math is not a very employable degree, because it doesn’t teach you employable skills. I like math, but not enough to be a math PhD student. Nor do I have the motivation to work on elaborate projects with little to no benefit. I think there is also a bit of a glass ceiling because most jobs that utilize anything deeper than calculus 3 will be expecting a masters degree or an engineering degree LOL, so again, math bachelors not very useful. As someone who is about finish a math degree, it’s clear that I have five options: teach, study to become an actuary or work in insurance/finance, study and work to become a programmer, go to grad school for something with the leverage brought by a mathematics education, or give up on math. None of those options are “apply for a decent job,” the math degree is typically just a stepping stone to invest more into something and hope (with a lot of effort of course) that it works out in the end later. You are a prime example of this, given that your projects and other hobbies that require a lot of time and motivation are not just math based, AND you’re in grad school, shooting for a PhD in a math adjacent subject.
@WaluigiPinballFan I understand your concern, and it is largely accurate. I suppose my primary point was that a math degree gives you the skills necessary to break into any field that uses any sort of math whatsoever. I know very few people who just obtain a degree and can actually get a solid job with it, on its own. Computer science majors, physics majors, engineering majors, and many others give you the skills necessary to learn the actual skills you need for a job. So, I suppose I figured doing additional things with your degree to leverage yourself was a given, considering the age old saying, "The degree lands you an interview, but your skills get you the job." All of the things I did required my math degree to some extent. The NSA hires the most mathematicians out of any organization in the world. The NGA, and other agencies in government also hire math majors. If you look on indeed, or Google right now at engineering jobs, data jobs, finance jobs, and much, much more, you will see that a math degree is listed in most of those as a degree which qualifies you for the position. However, you're right....If all you have to show for you degree is proofs then of course you have no employability besides research. Most math majors I know DON'T do this though, and they pick up some programming, and some additional minors/certifications. With these things, you have a leg up in most positions you apply to. Look at the bureau of labor statistics. You will see that the job outlook for mathematicians is higher than engineering, computer science, and more. MUCH faster than average. People hate on math degrees in a vacuum, like you are, saying things like, "Sure, it can be useful in obtaining any skill in any hard science, engineering, even creative fields which require mathematical insight, and pretty much any job you could ever want to get.....but we aren't considering those additional skills. We only care about if you can graduate, apply, and get the job with no other additional work." News flash, MOST degrees will not give you the actual skills you need to do your job properly and ultimately fall short under this criteria....look at how many engineers straight up can't get jobs, or computer scientists, or pretty much any STEM degree holder who decides not to pick up any other skills using their degree as a point of leverage. It's just dishonest to evaluate a degree in this way as a result (since no one in their right mind would ever think math, physics, engineering and so forth is ACTUALLY useless). It isn't the degree at that point, it's just not knowing how to leverage your degree to learn related and more employable skills which gives you immense value on any team you're on. Even actuaries have to pass exams, and CPAs also have to pass exams for their license. Comp sci majors must complete projects to compete in their field, and engineers must have internships and even their own projects in order to compete in their field as well. Every successful STEM degree holder (success = landed a job in their field in this case) has done something on top of their degree to land a very good job. It's just the reality of the situation. In this amazing, highly technical world you need to be constantly learning to compete. This is a given in society, and should therefore be factored into the potential employability or "usefulness" of a degree. One of my friends (math major) works with a government contractor developing weapons systems, and another one I know became a successful CPA. Both of them, and myself, will tell you that your math degree is VERY powerful if you actually use it to leverage yourself. If you think all you need is a piece of paper to survive and thrive in this world you need a major reality check. That's okay though, that's one of the main points of college. I promise that if you put your clearly capable mind to it, you will be able to be employed and be very competitive in the modern job market.
@@WaluigiPinballFanyeah. If you’re doing a whole degree’s worth of work in projects and minors, it’s pretty clear that the math degree wasn’t what carried him. If you did all this work in different fields, then you did well despite the degree, not because of it.
Kinda agree. I'm in applied statistics and math, currently studying data science. Math and statistics is crazy needed. Especially statistics, like holy f*ck, everything in society related to statistics. It's f*cking hard btw, i'm not as smart as you so i'm struggling with advanced statistics. But i do acknowledge that statistics is so applicable irl, in almost every field. Whether it's medical/healthcare to finance to business or science or bio, chem. I didn't even care about statistics till i learn about them and how its applied in real life. It's everywhere and so useful. It even changes how i look at the world.
Finance and computer sicence double major here. Having actually engaged with all the materials in my course, criticising maths is basically rejecting the foundation upon which my 2 entire degrees have been built. It's like, dude, look around. Everything in your world is maths. Your cup is maths. Your pen is maths. Your phone is a HELL of a lot of maths, so is the internet you're using. I think people's conception of maths needs to break out from just pre-calc and calc to really begin seeing the beauty and the connections in everything.
You were right on about most of these, but I was a little sad that history got roasted so little, especially when it didn't really match history majors at my school. I wish we were that creative in our fashion, lol. Please roast us more. Also, if you do a second of these, geography, philosophy, criminal justice, microbiology, sociology, library & info science, and economics would be fun to see too!
Born to study theater, forced to study physics so I can work a NASA and someone'll make documentary of how I designed the first ship that can go into space😍
..... the premise that the documentary will be Bout you is wrong, as if u design something in NASA that is a first, then it will be worked on my an immense amount of people and you will have a tiny sliver of contribution
@@nicoleni7192not only that but the actual design of the ship would be much more engineering + architectural related, obviously physics majors etc playing a role within the multidisciplinary team but it's not one of the main ones
Not architecture but i just dropped out of fashion because "doing smth kinda similar to art is worse than picking something completely unrelated to art" is just so true 💀
as a post-grad for TESL, i don't mind the kids. i just fcking hate the management in schools. the micromanagement and the toxic teacher groups etc 😔😔😔😔😔😔😔 also the education section being only 13 seconds is sending me for some reason 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
I study computer engineering, and I’m passionate about it. My girlfriend is equally dedicated to her field of education, specializing in K-12 and special education. She works as a paraprofessional in an elementary school and she loves taking care of those kids.
As a medicine student what you said is 100% correct, we are braindead half the time whether its from the study load or just overthinking things all the time. Lots of study, relating concepts and connections. Top students usually aren't that naturally gifted but incredibly disciplined.
The Architetcure one is so true. Im not even an Artchitcture student yet. This video made me realize that evn Architecture can be oversaturated and stuff. Like I dont wanna do it, its just the most practical one cuz my father can just teach me that shet.
Geology student here! I kinda count as environmental science I guess but since I'm planning to focus more on rare earth minerals or earthquakes that doesn't reallyyyy count. But the description does. I love looking at cool rocks but I'm also pretty curious about how everything works and can end up sounding pretty existential sometimes because of it! Fun fact I learned today btw: Algae and bacteria can fossilize. Modern geologists have fossilized bacteria from back in the Precambrian period, aka thousands of millions of years before people EXISTED
As someone that majors in graphic design, i am not in the 50% that dropped/swapped it, so yay :D As someone that minors in theatre, you are 100% right about theatre students. We WILL break into song, no you CANNOT stop us.
This video is quite fascinating - in my case as someone who does an Education/Arts (English) double degree, it's simultaneously spot-on and somehow oh so wrong. English was virtually perfect, as in almost every last word was correct - having taken courses centred around teaching gifted students, I think the traits of some gifted students really do overlap with those of my own (in my primary school years, at least). I frequently mention to my friends how my mathematics ability is basically limited to doing damage calculations in gacha games, and I hate that I am often lamenting how I only ever read fanfiction anymore instead of real books. On the other hand... I love working with kids. That said, it might be because of my minor, which is a language other than English. I really enjoy teaching them about the culture that the language comes from because I'm really passionate about that culture myself (or I'd like to think so, anyway). I do occasionally end up in agony thinking about things like parent-teacher interviews and excursions and camps, though, especially camps - I'm a selfish person, so once I get into full-time teaching, being asked to supervise students on overnight camps will probably be my worst nightmare. Giving up my time outside of school hours when I could be playing video games and eating a home-cooked meal? Genuinely horrifying.
High school sophomore here, I have no idea what I want to major in but I do want to go to med school for pediatrics :,) Also if you make a pt 2, foul you talk about band/music majors?
Engineering student here (specifically aerospace). Be real eng students make better friends outside thier major than within their major bc when its a niche field its hella competitive
As a med student, other degrees are honestly cooler, but i like having food to eat (also, i don't know if med is just harder in the US than in my country, bcs i legit just binge everything before the test and that has never failed me)
I'm a classics major, and when you got to talking about us, I was relieved because I'm not a dark academia girlie, mainly due to my love of t-shirts. And then you came in with the steel chair- (Will say, opposite of most majors in that everyone thinks it's hard. It's not it's so not I'm so glad my heart goes out to my STEM friends.)
At first I was upset at philosophy not being included, but then I went down a thought rabbit hole ultimately concluding that it doesn't matter. Which I guess fits; as someone going into philosophy.
Your comment is so Albert Camus-coded. Love that for you🫶
I’m a philosophy major as well lol.
@@vanillavania. one must imagine the philosphy major happy, the climb to a doctorate is enough to fill a students heart
I'm wheezing 😂
I’ve got a question,
what Would you do if you got handed a Death Note
My majors are never in these man, it's always just "bio" but art gets like 5 separate majors 😭
me neither 😭 I'm doing geography and geology
@@Tornnnadosame, im geology student and people always forget it even exists
@@Краденыйносочек ayyy i have a friend majoring in geology! shit is pretty cool
REAL 😭 i'm a microbio major and i feel like every mfer forgets it exists rip
@@Tornnnado What's geology?
The most offensive thing as an engineering student is that she lumped all the engineering majors together /j.
And she didn't even affirm it enough how difficult it is and how much society should be grateful to us for sacrificing our social for this.
/hj
Nothing worse the a chem engineer or civil dirt eater smh
@@dekkeroid2962 without engineers, there can be no advancment in science
@@googotygame This is hilarious. I study Aero Engineering, but this whole comment and responses is just living true to her stereotype.
i mean this in the nicest way possible, u kinda look like the human version of of an american shorthair cat
WTF does that mean? 😭
just noticed my typo this is gonna drive me insane now
@@newwaveinfantry8362 it's partially her vibes too. she has the energy of an unbothered cat. i feel like she just looks and acts like if an american shorthair cat suddenly turned human. the same way british actress vicky mcclure feels like the human version of an oriental shorthair cat
@@parmavioIets yk you can edit comments right
@@womp47 doing that removes the creator’s like tho lol
wannable art student studying architecture and I'm literally hanging on by a thread rn
same she was so real with that one lmaooooo
Currently neglecting my classes doing indie game dev.... pls just let me out of architecture now... I just told one of my firends I have free time to hang out NEXT FEBRUARY
Girl, pls try *skedaddling* from out of that unless you want permanent brain fog (switched majors after attempting to pursue an architecture degree and my mind, body, and soul is utterly destroyed)
u have time to watch this?
Wanna be artists studying law 😭🙏 i can’t take this anymore i dgaf ab ANYTHING we learn 😭😭😭
@@citexcode99 im in college idek for sure what i wanna do and know nothing but my advice is don't do something where you'll be miserable even if there's a ton of money😭
As a Physics major... yeah.
sameee
would u recommend it i was thinking of doing it lmao
@@vanillavania. I would not be doing physics if I was a sadist imo. Masochist? probably
@@ohhello1809 if you're willing to watch your grades fall to rock bottom, go ahead. Research is fun, academics is not
funnily enough i got the only F on an exam in a physics class where i am the only physics major in there. but i also didn't study for it 💀
As a biology kid that currently studies medicine: she is right. Most med students would rather learn a 600 page book by heart in three days and recite it to the teacher word by word than actually use their brain and understand something.
As a pre med student this is so accurate lmao, I’m very good at memorizing stuff but using my brain for something else…yeah I’ll pass💀💀💀
@@gH0ST_1230 wow. great to trust a doctor like that. I wish you guys were never allowed to take care of people's health and lives in the first place
@@debil_dd brother what are you babbling bout😭💀
@@debil_dd real
The one about engineers making huge statements about other fields is actually so damn true. Im an EE and I swear the study library always has at least 3-4 engineers that actually do very little work while they're there but can ramble about uni degree politics forever and talk about how worth it one degree is over the other and more as if theyve taken those majors themselves
I study EE too and this is so real
I just watched a video of an Aerospace student roasting and tierlisting all the other Engineering degrees😂
EE vs ME who would win. every. single. time. theres a never ending rivalry between eletrical and mechanical. who is the greatest? the most difficult? the only real engineering?
EE duh (im in ee)
I have a friend who barely does any work in engineering and is holding on by a thread but also reminds my other friend who’s a painting major with a Gallery and with a business where he sells his art that, engendering will bring him more money in the long run. That may be true but you need to be a good engineer to be the top 1%.
@@frinchifri2985 EE is probably harder but ME is real engineering, however, Civil is the bedrock.
RIP my fellow male nursing students, one day we will be included 😔🙏🏻
yeah she kinda ate with that sorry
lol I was just gonna comment this 😆
we are the true forgotten members of college major society
Gonna pretend like she didn't say anything about us because we're already flawless students and definitely not cuz' she forgot we exist ✊😔
Here I’ll do one for you guys!:
If you’re a male nursing student you’re a gifted kid that never burned out or just someone with a lot of care for others who constantly forgets to care about themselves. You have infinite potential in your field but you’re often overlooked because of your gender.
English major here, I am so shocked at how spot on you are lmao
With the adult books, I thought she was gonna say about how mind numbingly boring most are
Same 😭
She was accurate in telling us how we tell people that "maths is scary"😭😭😭
Fr I got personally attacked
I actually am okay with math but I got behind in math during Covid. I mainly thought English classes are fun to teach and I liked my high school English teachers. Now, I am starting to fear having to grade essays.
i studied linguistics and i love to imagine that people will ask how many languages i speak and then i will proceed to tell them about how linguistics is the study of human communication as a whole rather than any particular languages and then say the same thing in 6 languages, 4 of which are unintelligible but it doesn't matter, because no one i ever speak to is going to speak all 6 of the languages that i pretend to speak. also i love etymology and the pink trombone and the ipa chart website.
I love the ipa chart website! Sometimes, I'll just randomly pull it up, scroll through a random language wiki page, and see if I can pronounce all the phonemes found in that language.
(Not a linguistics major, but linguistics was part of my minor. Unfortunately, I only speak 1.5 languages, and that's a bit of an overstatement with how little I actually practice that half language.)
Stem major with linguistics minor here.
Understanding how many languages do not have the sounds in English and usually use a substitute helps me understand foreign English accents a lot better.
In particular the “Th” sound, the “j” sound, and the second “L” sound (Noble versus Nobel).
But then you meet someone who actually speaks the 6 languages you pretend to speak.
I too, as a Linguistics major love how no one ever thinks about us because unless you have tangential experience tying Linguistics to the study of language, you tend to assume it's like psychology or something, and assume Linguistics is a competition to see who can speak the most languages. Historical linguistics is where it's at!
"linguistics is the study of human communication"
Lol. Now i see why this field is stagnating in general, and, as exception, only transformers makes difference.
Comp sci major here….and yeah shockingly I don’t regret my choice 😂 I self studied code using tutorials for a while, had the time of my life, then decided I wanted to learn more.
The only way to get a job in this field is by doing like a bajillion internships so hopefully you’d stand out amongst others. Either way, programming is fun af and I’d be happy doing it even if I wasn’t paid lol
I'm a comp sci major student too! I have always been told to learn "coding" in my free time, and that I don't need a degree, but I was so shocked to know that cs was way more than just coding, which made me feel better and worse in the same time lol
Hi, can I ask what resources you used to self study? I wanna learn how to code as a hobby
Doesn’t sound too different from pre-med students who need a million volunteer/shadowing hours, research experiences, and internships.
@@raghdahmansour360 in wheat way is it more than coding?
@oluchimuoguilim you take Math modules, like discrete math and logic, computer systems, where you study how computers actually operate, algorithms, which is the most related to coding but has bit more maths to it, networks and how the intrent works, also some colleges offer now AI modules where you study nueral networks and some stuff (haven't taken this yet) as well as cybersecurity..
In short. The other stuff is the theortical part that helps you understand computers more at the deep level, while coding, is just dealing with the surface if thats makes any sense
Lol the psychology one is kinda accurate but I think a lot of people fell into doing it because of being around people with mental health issues or they were dealing with it in their own life. I did it because of that! I knew some of my classmates who did it because they had a parent with schizophrenia. Many cases like that of people, theres two types, ones that have actually had psychology and the human condition affect their life and/or the people that didn't know what they wanted to study and its funny how I'm both!
parent with schizophrenia ouch, i wonder what their face looked like during genetics
i am both lol
This sounds very accurate, even as a CS major. I thought long and hard about doing psychology, but I am definitely not a people person. I grew up around so many people with mental health/life issues and am used to being the one family and friends would vent to. I myself find it hard to communicate with people but have been told id make a great therapist. Also loved psychology in high school
im neurodivergent with anxiety/depression/trauma (the basics) and have a family with a mix of these things so I went to psych because of that and also because I didn't know what to do cause an art degree is apparently worthless and I thought I can learn coding on my own
@@anisa2273 an art degree isn’t necessarily worthless but it is something that can be entirely self taught which makes it a bit of a waste of money. any degree can be worthless though if you never have a plan to apply it.
female engineering major here who loves humanities majors and doesn't think college is useless outside of STEM :') however i have met many guys in my major who have the exact mindset you're describing
i misread "female engineering" as one word.
@@nargaman261 brb, learning how to engineer females lol
I love how oddly specific this is 😂 you got me at the „15th questiomaire this semester“
Btw as a med student thanks
As an engineering major, this is a trap of sorts just can't tell for what purpose yet
The average life cycle of a premed students always ends up with them with a degree they can’t use because their GPA is too low for med school and they didn’t really get enough experience to get much use from it as a backup plan or they up in another program entirely like Psychology or something like that
political science major actually hit home with the amount of documentaries i watch
frr 😭😭
recommend some good ones 😭😭
Samee
How'd you include whatever the hell acturial science is but not philosophy
Nobody cares about your philosophy degree bro, actuarial science has high employability cuz it's what companies look for
@@tarecy1923 People who say this never look at the actual philosophy grad employment statistics (most of them end up in law or management, assuming they don't go into academia which is usually always the intention)
They're legit the highest paid humanities degree unironically lmao (unless you consider architecture a humanities)
@@AweSean-wv3xo I think he was memeing
Actuarial science is a highly relevant and employable field of study and seems to be quite future proof, as It's used in businesses everywhere, tends to pay well and always has a market
@@AweSean-wv3xo only rich kids study philosophy dont they? At least thats how it is in my country (the philo majors are stereotyped to be quite bougie)
You got theater so right. Except that a lot of us are actually super insecure and shy so we’ve made theater are whole personality
Your game design -> animation -> design -> illustration pipeline is so me and all my old classmates NAILED IT
I'm an education major and i promise i dont hate kids 😭
most of the time
tbf most schools have a really terrible system where they teach you "how to teach" for like 4 freaking years then in the final semester you actually get to teach kids for the first time ever and then you find out you hate it and drop out.
@@Jwellsuhhuh at least here at Bates in the US where i study education (working on my certification) we have placements every semester working in classrooms from the first intro to education class until you leave, which is nice. also im a physics major lol
@@jfrederino that’s really good to hear. More schools should have at least offer some kind of practice teaching opportunities every semester or incorporate it into their classes better
13:00 Actuarial Major here. I was very surprised to not just be lumped in with the regular math people. And yes I do explain what an Actuary is at least once per month.
Well, have you explained it this month?
If not, enlighten me
@@A_Professional422 You bastard. We price insurance premiums and do risk analysis in the context of insurance. A solid example would be calculating probability of someone's death to price a life insurance policy or calculating car accident probability, or estimating the damages of an accident based on someone's vehicle to price a car insurance policy.
Us actuarial majors have got to stick together 👊
I’m in med school and 100 percent agree that being smart is not really required to be in medicine.
I used to think med students were extremely smart until I saw myself and my peers.
It's all about being a study zombie
Scary
Calling math degree worthless is crazy
i feel like the little tiger in zootopia “today i can hunt for tax exemptions, im going to be an actuary!”
If it’s a pure maths degree it kinda is. It’s like the fine arts of the stem field. Not to say it isn't valuable. Just if you don't come from rich/supportive parents it's a risky move. Something I am planning for later in life.
@@Noname-ok4tf 😢but the work done by pure mathematicians is able to be used in practical applications after many years . it eventually has a "use", so i wouldn't say a pure math degree is worthless. plus pure math is the foundation for many stem subjects
also are you implying fine arts degrees are useless? because the arts are very important for our societies.
of course one could argue that you could do arts or math without the degree, but this could apply to many majors/degrees. you can be a programmer without a computer science degree. are computer science degrees useless then? maybe with over saturation in the job market, most degrees are becoming useless.
anyway i believe a pure math degree or fine art degree is no more useless than any other degree . except maybe degrees you require to do a job like medicine or law
also it would be unfair to call any degree worthless because any degree will teach you critical thinking and creativity, and will open your mind
@@fish-fy5sh yea i agree but she meant in the form of employability. Math degree only jobs is probably going to be some stock firm in wall street or cryptography and obviously academics. I really like math and i dont like how this is either but its reality
applied math is very good, pure math without going the full phd really isnt the best
kinda spot on as medical student and yes, you just have to be hard working if you're in medicine. i think surgeons are extremely hard working and skilled. the smart ones according to me are the math and physics students
Yep, don't forget engineering, med student here that was gonna do eng but chickened out, plus it's nice knowing I have a job lined up lol
Agreed! Being somewhat intelligent certainly doesn't hurt, but it really comes down to a healthy dose of masochism and a willingness to give up your social life 🥲
I agree with your statement that med school is more endurance than raw intelligence, but you definitely need both to be at the top of your class. At the med school level, almost everyone is hardworking and above average in intelligence; if you’re a genius you will definitely stand out and have an easier time.
this was so spot on and smartly delivered i loveee
As a physics student, D for Degree 👍
The chemistry student one is so true...
We have one meme account that is almost entirely dedicated to one professor, the stupid memes are probably a significant part of why not a higher percentage drops out
As a computer science major, yeah. When I was a kid, my schools would bring in presenters to tell us about what jobs we should do, and that the rate of the expansion of the CS field was far outstripping the number of professionals in computer science, but now that I'm in computer science, every company is like "yeah we have enough of your kind" and then i starve like I just really really wanted to learn about big O or whatever
Noooo never mention big O notation ever again! Still have flashbacks from my Data Structures class and I've been graduated early last year as a Japanese language major
As history major, I like telling people about events they never heard of nor care about.
The engineering one hits close to home
now i feel guilty procrastinating by watching this video as an architecture student 😭
As a math major I am scared at how accurate this is 💀
XD
I pure math major, when I transfer probably gonna minor in Applied math and Comp Sci or Philosphy.
@@retro_jonnyRecommend CS.
I'm from applied statistics and math, currently studying data science. Learning about computer/programming is so so so useful.
As a psyc student, you gagged me with the survey….
She talked aboutActuarial Sciences and forgot about Economics 💀
I don’t know anyone in economics that’s why
@@888_crystalI really like you Crystal you’re my best friend ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@@888_crystalyou’re very pretty
economic students are pretty much the same with business ones, tell me i'm right
@@anisa2273 nooo please take it back I need approval in order to keep going 😭
You are right though about those workaholic majors like architecture because it's not fun to be a masochist but it is fun for other people to think you're a masochist
Economics major. To the Finance and Business people: our easiest class is harder than your hardest class!
try doing intermediate and cost accounting bud 😭😭😭
What if I studied a useless librarianship degree
Minor in data science or get a masters in it. I have hope for you!!
ok i loved this but the stem slander is crazyyyy (the engineer hate is reciprocated though)
Psychology is just undecided with extra steps
You get to figure you why *someone* might be undecided
The psychology one was ON POINT for me 😭❤
0:45 psychology... you watch reality tv, follow celebrity gossip and listen to real crime podcasts. You want to study psychology because you think it will allow you to analyze people in relationships and life. Instead, you find out just how many questionnaires and statistics are out thrre
Me, a religion major: Guess I'm not doing anything wrong! Anyways...
*Proceeds to validate the crusades for the next 35 minutes*
Omg you’re so right on environmental science and engineering 🚶♀️. I’m studying for environmental engineering…../ it’s def a mix
As a geoscience student I feel very offended that my verrrrry important major wasn't mentionned. But I did relate with the chemistry and physics and environmental science part (though I don't really get why they should be more nihilist than others). Very cool video btw !
They are nihilistic about climate change
the environmental science one is frighteningly accurate. thank you
You nailed biology entirely, I’m here barely making rent while struggling to find anything I can do with my degree. I can also speak for music production, most of us are incredibly dorky
I need a part two for all the Social Work majors 😭
Yeah, me too
Yeah these are pretty on point. I’m an enviro/bio major and my fiancés mom is always wondering when I’m going into pre med.
So, when are you going into premed?
philosophy majors left out… (as we probably ought to be lol)
i wanted to include it but was worried if i talk too much about the Fruit Juice and Silly Beans That Make You Happy id be demonetised
@ ❤️❤️❤️
@@888_crystallmfao
@@PhinnOzaint nobody cares😭🙏 im studying law and i hate it homie 😭🙏
As a Computer Science Engineering student who wanted to be a filmmaker and is taking film electives, everything hit home. You nailed it.
It’s almost creepy how much you nailed it.
first I was sad you didn't include sociology, but actually I don't think I wanna hear it lol
1:45 in my defense, I knew this was gonna be like this, unfortunately not a lot of people who do go into it realize that the job is hell, but somehow it's still worth doing (and it is), but not everyone is "built" for veterinary stuff
As someone studying political science...I completely agree. The entire class its boring because were reading about old peoples opinions. But when a conspiracy theory is involved im very intrigued and listening. Also I wouldve loved to hear what you said at the beginning.
Lmao these were pretty spot on. As an engineering student I can't stand hearing other classmates talk about how much better engineering is compared to other majors. Like shut up Nelson, we aren't special
As a chemistry major (heavily leaning towards doing my concentration in environmental chemistry and potentially even minoring in environmental science) this is spot on for me in every way except that im not actually constantly on hikes or rock climbing. I just wish i was.
Mathematics major here (also minored in physics & statistics). As everyone here knows, mathematics is at the forefront of any hard stem field. Those who criticize mathematics as a major are just scared because many mathematicians steal their jobs. I'm currently working as an R&D scientist with the national geospatial intelligence agency while doing my phD in statistics. I have done consulting work, and worked with a team of engineers developing a mini rocket engine for their capstone project. I am also very creative, and I develop tools for my music (effects, synthesizers,..). I do some 3d animation for fun as well because I love 3d modeling. Since the exciting world of procedural animation is simply a set of differential equations with initial conditions it was very easy for me to get into it mechanically. For all the math majors out there, your degree is only "too theoretical" if you choose to not apply anything you've learned to anything that your or your potential employers are interested in. Either way, you can go to graduate school and become a researcher if you're mainly interested in the theoretical aspect. However, most math majors I know are interested in BOTH worlds and are therefore more employable than most hard science degrees simply because many math majors are creative and have the background needed to excel in most hard science fields. They just have to pick up some additional skills (minors, certificates, projects and so forth). Okay, my rant is over...
Yeah I’m also a math major. I mean, what you’re saying is that the minors, certificates, and projects are what are helpful… not the math degree. I don’t see many employers who value proofs lmao. I am certain that what you’ve learned about mathematics has been helpful to those endeavors, but alone doesn’t do much, as you said. I think the theme is here is that you can’t really do much with a math degree unless you make it your life or intend to do graduate school. In other words, a bachelors in math is not a very employable degree, because it doesn’t teach you employable skills.
I like math, but not enough to be a math PhD student. Nor do I have the motivation to work on elaborate projects with little to no benefit. I think there is also a bit of a glass ceiling because most jobs that utilize anything deeper than calculus 3 will be expecting a masters degree or an engineering degree LOL, so again, math bachelors not very useful.
As someone who is about finish a math degree, it’s clear that I have five options: teach, study to become an actuary or work in insurance/finance, study and work to become a programmer, go to grad school for something with the leverage brought by a mathematics education, or give up on math. None of those options are “apply for a decent job,” the math degree is typically just a stepping stone to invest more into something and hope (with a lot of effort of course) that it works out in the end later.
You are a prime example of this, given that your projects and other hobbies that require a lot of time and motivation are not just math based, AND you’re in grad school, shooting for a PhD in a math adjacent subject.
@WaluigiPinballFan I understand your concern, and it is largely accurate. I suppose my primary point was that a math degree gives you the skills necessary to break into any field that uses any sort of math whatsoever. I know very few people who just obtain a degree and can actually get a solid job with it, on its own. Computer science majors, physics majors, engineering majors, and many others give you the skills necessary to learn the actual skills you need for a job. So, I suppose I figured doing additional things with your degree to leverage yourself was a given, considering the age old saying, "The degree lands you an interview, but your skills get you the job." All of the things I did required my math degree to some extent. The NSA hires the most mathematicians out of any organization in the world. The NGA, and other agencies in government also hire math majors. If you look on indeed, or Google right now at engineering jobs, data jobs, finance jobs, and much, much more, you will see that a math degree is listed in most of those as a degree which qualifies you for the position. However, you're right....If all you have to show for you degree is proofs then of course you have no employability besides research. Most math majors I know DON'T do this though, and they pick up some programming, and some additional minors/certifications. With these things, you have a leg up in most positions you apply to. Look at the bureau of labor statistics. You will see that the job outlook for mathematicians is higher than engineering, computer science, and more. MUCH faster than average. People hate on math degrees in a vacuum, like you are, saying things like, "Sure, it can be useful in obtaining any skill in any hard science, engineering, even creative fields which require mathematical insight, and pretty much any job you could ever want to get.....but we aren't considering those additional skills. We only care about if you can graduate, apply, and get the job with no other additional work." News flash, MOST degrees will not give you the actual skills you need to do your job properly and ultimately fall short under this criteria....look at how many engineers straight up can't get jobs, or computer scientists, or pretty much any STEM degree holder who decides not to pick up any other skills using their degree as a point of leverage. It's just dishonest to evaluate a degree in this way as a result (since no one in their right mind would ever think math, physics, engineering and so forth is ACTUALLY useless). It isn't the degree at that point, it's just not knowing how to leverage your degree to learn related and more employable skills which gives you immense value on any team you're on. Even actuaries have to pass exams, and CPAs also have to pass exams for their license. Comp sci majors must complete projects to compete in their field, and engineers must have internships and even their own projects in order to compete in their field as well. Every successful STEM degree holder (success = landed a job in their field in this case) has done something on top of their degree to land a very good job. It's just the reality of the situation. In this amazing, highly technical world you need to be constantly learning to compete. This is a given in society, and should therefore be factored into the potential employability or "usefulness" of a degree. One of my friends (math major) works with a government contractor developing weapons systems, and another one I know became a successful CPA. Both of them, and myself, will tell you that your math degree is VERY powerful if you actually use it to leverage yourself. If you think all you need is a piece of paper to survive and thrive in this world you need a major reality check. That's okay though, that's one of the main points of college. I promise that if you put your clearly capable mind to it, you will be able to be employed and be very competitive in the modern job market.
@@WaluigiPinballFanyeah. If you’re doing a whole degree’s worth of work in projects and minors, it’s pretty clear that the math degree wasn’t what carried him. If you did all this work in different fields, then you did well despite the degree, not because of it.
Kinda agree.
I'm in applied statistics and math, currently studying data science.
Math and statistics is crazy needed. Especially statistics, like holy f*ck, everything in society related to statistics.
It's f*cking hard btw, i'm not as smart as you so i'm struggling with advanced statistics.
But i do acknowledge that statistics is so applicable irl, in almost every field. Whether it's medical/healthcare to finance to business or science or bio, chem.
I didn't even care about statistics till i learn about them and how its applied in real life. It's everywhere and so useful.
It even changes how i look at the world.
Finance and computer sicence double major here. Having actually engaged with all the materials in my course, criticising maths is basically rejecting the foundation upon which my 2 entire degrees have been built.
It's like, dude, look around. Everything in your world is maths. Your cup is maths. Your pen is maths. Your phone is a HELL of a lot of maths, so is the internet you're using.
I think people's conception of maths needs to break out from just pre-calc and calc to really begin seeing the beauty and the connections in everything.
You were right on about most of these, but I was a little sad that history got roasted so little, especially when it didn't really match history majors at my school. I wish we were that creative in our fashion, lol. Please roast us more. Also, if you do a second of these, geography, philosophy, criminal justice, microbiology, sociology, library & info science, and economics would be fun to see too!
Ok but I literally had never heard about the Parasite movie before and it's the third time today. I think I should watch Parasite.
You really should
its really good, yeah
how have u not heard of parasite until now??
@@parmavioIets not everyone is super updated with all the popular shows/movies yk:)
ITS SUCH A GOOD MOVIEEE. it is a korean film fyi!
Born to study theater, forced to study physics so I can work a NASA and someone'll make documentary of how I designed the first ship that can go into space😍
If you believe that you will be the first person to design a spaceship, then I have a bridge to sell you.
..... the premise that the documentary will be Bout you is wrong, as if u design something in NASA that is a first, then it will be worked on my an immense amount of people and you will have a tiny sliver of contribution
google stats urself
@@nicoleni7192not only that but the actual design of the ship would be much more engineering + architectural related, obviously physics majors etc playing a role within the multidisciplinary team but it's not one of the main ones
@@nicoleni7192 Hey! So this was a joke about Theater majors being attention seeking😭Im not even a theater major, I study law
😥 There was no online tutorials for coding when I was six years old. Hell, there was pretty much no "online" at all even.
Yeah fr if you learned it more than 5 years ago it's now obsolete
You should've locked in and created those tutorials yourself, duh
Not architecture but i just dropped out of fashion because "doing smth kinda similar to art is worse than picking something completely unrelated to art" is just so true 💀
Being from Maple Ridge and hearing my town randomly mentioned in a video has to be the biggest jumpscare
Ayyye maple ridge mentioned
as a post-grad for TESL, i don't mind the kids. i just fcking hate the management in schools. the micromanagement and the toxic teacher groups etc 😔😔😔😔😔😔😔
also the education section being only 13 seconds is sending me for some reason 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
Social work major working in a school and omg teachers are so cliquey 💀
I study computer engineering, and I’m passionate about it. My girlfriend is equally dedicated to her field of education, specializing in K-12 and special education. She works as a paraprofessional in an elementary school and she loves taking care of those kids.
Not even in uni yet but looking to joint degree in chemistry and biology, and im already laughing at the chemistry memes. They're hilarious, guys
As a medicine student what you said is 100% correct, we are braindead half the time whether its from the study load or just overthinking things all the time.
Lots of study, relating concepts and connections. Top students usually aren't that naturally gifted but incredibly disciplined.
As a fine arts major, you’re so right 😳😔 -me when I wear red doc martens with every outfit
The Architetcure one is so true. Im not even an Artchitcture student yet. This video made me realize that evn Architecture can be oversaturated and stuff. Like I dont wanna do it, its just the most practical one cuz my father can just teach me that shet.
2:53 this is what chemistry teachers are like to. It’s incredible how many times in a year some one can say make like a proton a stay positive😭
extremely accurate as a physics major
an animation / illustration student this is accurate.
Sometimes the aim doesn't hit the target, sometimes the target doesn't even get aimed
Geology student here! I kinda count as environmental science I guess but since I'm planning to focus more on rare earth minerals or earthquakes that doesn't reallyyyy count. But the description does. I love looking at cool rocks but I'm also pretty curious about how everything works and can end up sounding pretty existential sometimes because of it!
Fun fact I learned today btw: Algae and bacteria can fossilize. Modern geologists have fossilized bacteria from back in the Precambrian period, aka thousands of millions of years before people EXISTED
As someone that majors in graphic design, i am not in the 50% that dropped/swapped it, so yay :D
As someone that minors in theatre, you are 100% right about theatre students. We WILL break into song, no you CANNOT stop us.
Oo another graphic design major! What is it like for you?
Brilliant.. As always..
As a math major...with a CS minor... That hurt me twice. 💀
unemployed^2! i’m kidding, keep doing great, i believe in u!
20 seconds into the video and already got called out wtf
on a completely different note, my jazz brain has been having an orgasm over the background music. the jazz standard is "just friends"
The most replayed distribution shows what a lot of people majored in lol
This video is quite fascinating - in my case as someone who does an Education/Arts (English) double degree, it's simultaneously spot-on and somehow oh so wrong. English was virtually perfect, as in almost every last word was correct - having taken courses centred around teaching gifted students, I think the traits of some gifted students really do overlap with those of my own (in my primary school years, at least). I frequently mention to my friends how my mathematics ability is basically limited to doing damage calculations in gacha games, and I hate that I am often lamenting how I only ever read fanfiction anymore instead of real books.
On the other hand... I love working with kids. That said, it might be because of my minor, which is a language other than English. I really enjoy teaching them about the culture that the language comes from because I'm really passionate about that culture myself (or I'd like to think so, anyway). I do occasionally end up in agony thinking about things like parent-teacher interviews and excursions and camps, though, especially camps - I'm a selfish person, so once I get into full-time teaching, being asked to supervise students on overnight camps will probably be my worst nightmare. Giving up my time outside of school hours when I could be playing video games and eating a home-cooked meal? Genuinely horrifying.
I was a business major my first semester freshman year and it was too hard for me 💀💀💀💀💀💀
why am I getting personally attacked for the full video 😭
I was skeptical at first but that psychology major description was so on point, on God i know so many people like this
High school sophomore here, I have no idea what I want to major in but I do want to go to med school for pediatrics :,) Also if you make a pt 2, foul you talk about band/music majors?
As a finance major, I’m offended that you think we all dress like that 😡
Yeah bro we all dress like extras from the wolf of Wall Street obviously
The most important part of working the medical industry is not dying of exhaustion
Pure math student here… and about math majors, that’s absolutely true
anyone else in culinary arts? I was hoping she would mention it 😭
Engineering student here (specifically aerospace). Be real eng students make better friends outside thier major than within their major bc when its a niche field its hella competitive
In Aerospace. Its one of the highest unemployment rates right now (lowest of the top 10). Might want to swap out to mechanical and get Aero later on.
crying in my gender, women, and sexuality degree 🙏
??💀💀
hey at least u have a degree in women!! u know exactly how to get them!1!
3:22 Med student here : we dumb af ngl 😭😭 I’d say what really sets us aside is being able to lock in for hours ig
I just graduated from high school and after watching this video I realised that I do not want to go to university.
Me in BME thinking I’m so different and better than all the other engineering degrees even though I’m just as awkward with only half the salary
Computer science jobs are available in the UK, especially if you can teach it
I am shocked that you managed to disect my 2 majors almost perfectly...
As a med student, other degrees are honestly cooler, but i like having food to eat (also, i don't know if med is just harder in the US than in my country, bcs i legit just binge everything before the test and that has never failed me)
W video
This gonna blow up fs
I'm a classics major, and when you got to talking about us, I was relieved because I'm not a dark academia girlie, mainly due to my love of t-shirts.
And then you came in with the steel chair-
(Will say, opposite of most majors in that everyone thinks it's hard. It's not it's so not I'm so glad my heart goes out to my STEM friends.)
That chemistry major one is so real…
Those memes are so funny to me for no reason
Land surveyors laugh at the unemployed and go on field work trips to avoid HR.