I think the huge exception to everything you're saying (which you mentioned in the beginning) are science and especially engineering professions. You're not going to be building rockets at NASA as a theater major who never took calc 1, but within the realm of engineering, it doesn't always matter. An aerospace engineering major and an electrical engineering major can both get jobs at NASA, but you'd still need that general engineering experience.
Great points! College major matters in highly concentrated fields like engineering. It's just that you have to supplement your degree with vocationally relevant areas if you have a useless degree.
Depends on what job. All else being equal, having the most relevant major (or a relevant major) for the job you apply to will help, but for certain "elitist" jobs (like you said), if you have the right university name, your major doesn't matter as much. I will also add that that's not really fair, but that's reality.
I think the huge exception to everything you're saying (which you mentioned in the beginning) are science and especially engineering professions. You're not going to be building rockets at NASA as a theater major who never took calc 1, but within the realm of engineering, it doesn't always matter. An aerospace engineering major and an electrical engineering major can both get jobs at NASA, but you'd still need that general engineering experience.
Great points! College major matters in highly concentrated fields like engineering. It's just that you have to supplement your degree with vocationally relevant areas if you have a useless degree.
Depends on what job. All else being equal, having the most relevant major (or a relevant major) for the job you apply to will help, but for certain "elitist" jobs (like you said), if you have the right university name, your major doesn't matter as much. I will also add that that's not really fair, but that's reality.
Good sharing I enjoyed ur videos 👍14
Happy to see u friend and good luck
omg tysm good luck for U