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My degree has always been useless. MASS MEDIA. Well, nobody told me not pursue something else. I was a first generation college student/graduate. When you come from divorced parents, you lose direction in life. It took me 17 years to graduate from a 4-year school. I had to work full-time as well. So, I've been working as a security officer, which just sucks. Underemployment and working shitty hours.
sorry to hear that! i’m rooting for you, hope it all works out for you. social media marketing, coding especially and UX/UI certificates might complement your major! google has ux/ui classes online and it’s pretty in demand in this day and age.
when it comes to a mathematics degree Shane, it would depend on what you study. There is a saying. Applied mathemathics is math to explore the world and Pure Mathematics is math to explore the world of math.
I have a master degree in Applied Maths to Economics and Management, I learned a lot of statistics, operational research, econometrics, a lot of micro and macro economics, a lot of accounting, numerical analysis and algorithms, programming, I attended optional Database related subjects, and I never missed work, only time to do it. I have been working on Business Intelligence and DWH area but also on Software Development area. Even without being an Engineer I already developed software that is used by Engineers. A degree is a pass to a permanent learning process if you choose a more complex one like applied maths you get very good tools to help you learning anything else for the rest of your life.
I honestly wish 17-year-old me found this channel! If you are like me and done a useless art/photography degree go and use it (the only time you’ll probably ever use it) to get into a Marketing postgraduate (Masters), you can either use the marketing knowledge to help your photography business or use your photography experience to appeal to employers when applying for a Marketing role. But for the love of god, DO NOT do a masters in another Art subject, do it in something that is likely going to make you more versatile as a professional and any Marketing graduate who also has a creative flair generally has great advantage Even if you have graduated in a photography degree, don’t despair I know a few people that have gotten into marketing assistant roles (one of my old classmates even becoming an assistant creative director) because employers are thinking “if I teach them basic marketing I could save money on creative content if and when we need it and won’t need to get a freelancer in” and if you’re let’s say half way through your degree, then make your work more commercialised (work that businesses can use to promote themselves). It’s your best option really, if you get yourself into a marketing role (creative content) you’ll be doing more photography (along with other things) work than your classmates that are still working in McDonalds (or a crappy office job if lucky) 6 years after graduating
So, studied economics. Economics lets you read the newspaper and know what comes next whether its reading the economic cycle, knowing the response of government agencies, or reading into broad patterns. There is also the fact that a ton of rich ppl who have kids often study economics, and economics majors tend to be the ones working at banks or running hedge funds. I'd say its more correlative because let's be honest, half the curriculum is made up and not particularly rigorous outside its own academic scope.
Mans forgot a culinary/professional cooking degree. Can find work anywhere you go with that one, not to mention learning to cook for yourself is a huge plus
*FINANCE JOB W/O FINANCE DEGREE* You dont need a finance degree to get a good job in finance you just need to find a firm to sponsor you to take the exams to be registered to sell securities.
Any degree maths related that helps companies solving problems maximizing profit and reducing costs is a good degree. Typically maths is mandatory for all of that. Programming in any language that allows modelling the problem (Java, Python, VBA, C#, SQL, PLSQL, Mathematica, R, etc) as most problems these days process huge amounts of data and cannot be solved or analyzed manually, handling data against a database (e.g. if you need to build a management decision dashboard that analyzes last 5 year sales you really really need to have basic SQL knowledge as data will be stored on a database for sure), understanding basic data structures, and if highly production related subjects physics, mechanics or other more detailed subjects are important. One huge and highly relevant area for companies is Operational Research. The best idea in my opinion is to deeply learn all above subjects and after that specialize on several management areas that allow persons to understand companies management principles, but typically any person that is good at maths understands every single management concept quite easy as all economical and management concepts start on the basic +/- operator (debt / credit) and end in forex trading concepts that in the end also have maths formulas behind (typically highly related to statistics, expected values and others). What I meant is to work on a company these days some basic skills will always be required, know how to use Excel very well for instance will be mandatory for almost anyone these days. If you know how to automate things using VBA with it even better .... can save you a huge amount of time on repetitive tasks.
13:40 I agree with you. I’m a math major, and I am trying to learn programming skills, and I am also doing the pre-med track because I’m very sure that I will not get a job related to pure mathematics 😅
id say if you are able to publish some papers on pure mathematics of your own, then only pursue pure mathematics, otherwise its a teaching job at the end of the road.
Basically…being good with numbers or programming. And that’s what a lot of people are not good at. Many people do biology or humanities because they are bad at mathematics and coding
Im doing biomed, im so glad I got to a degree where i can still end up making a good salary and be able to study what I enjoy, health sciences are the GOATs
I had a great video suggestion idea. :The most or top scalable careers/jobs. For instance someone working in tech sales have little to no limits on how much income they can bring in, or and entrepreneur, or a lawyer, jobs that require gigs. I would love this!!
Have you ever thought about doing a video on online certifications like google’s etc… I’ve heard great things about google’s and other companies but there’s so many options
id id my masters in international human rights law and i wrote my dissertation on the Maputo Protocl and so i taught myself how to defend my african wife and htat's very important ot me
I feel like some of these numbers are a little low. My dad makes 140k a year with a nursing degree and my friend whos a computer science major like me got offered a 200k salary working for google straight out of college. I guess the averages eventually average out but they just seem low to me.
I'm new to the channel so I have some questions: 1, is the statistics apply for a certain country or worldwide 2, can u check the statistics of a job/degree in a specific country. Thank u ❤️
Will you now merge Computer Science and Computer Engineering degrees together since you didn't mention it at all and you have always spoken highly of Computer Engineering?
Schools here in my country does not offer MIS, the only schools that offer them are the most prestigious schools with expensive (af) tuition fee and hours away from home. It sucks cuz i really want to take MIS. Might take marketing or finance instead 😏
There are a lot of schools that offer MIS/CIS through their business school. Every school I have attended has had the major offered. Texas Southern, Wiley, Arizona State, University of Houston
Love the video but I desperately wish people realized we wouldn't have the opportunity to pursue anything related to finance or software development if we didn't have a balanced ecosystem. Nature is painfully taken for fucking granted and it's mind-blowing.
I’d also add Human Resource Management to the list…EVERY company has HR departments…hospitals, hotel chains, school systems, etc. it’s a very versatile degree across multiple industries 😊
Math majors have to take Discrete math which is the main mathematical foundation for data structures and algorithms. Add to that math majors usually have to take "computer science 1" which at my school is under IT and called "Intro to Scripting". Latwr on I will be required to huild mathematical and statistical models in python for the Applied Math concentration. But evej withoutbthe concentration you WILL be coding as a math major in most cases these days at leaat onna basic level.
pretty much. basically IT management places more emphasis on managing IT workers whereas MIS involves implementing and managing information systems. but the jobs for both would be the same depending on the courses taken
Can you please make a video on the prospects of public health and bioinformatics, Please?What is the future ,pros and cons of studying both of these subjects?
Watch these videos, Ahmed. -Is a MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS degree worth it? ruclips.net/video/EMGvP6hav_U/видео.html -Is Finance A Good Major? ruclips.net/video/zwKrd76eWeM/видео.html -The BEST Technology Degrees ruclips.net/video/lD_8-v1nPrE/видео.html
Is a psychology degree worth it? Could you make a video about degrees that deal with interacting with others like counseling, teaching, or something of that sort?
He doesn't have a video specifically about helping people but he does have different videos concerning each degree that you mentioned. In short, and I agree with him, psychology isn't a great option unless you are willing and understand that you will probably need to get a masters to work in the field.
I love psychology. It is a very interesting topic, but it is so hard to get a job as a psychologist. If you are already doing the psychology degree, don't feel bad; use this a motivation to go to the next step, a master's degree. Good luck!!
You won't go very far with a BS/BA in psychology. To work in mental healthcare, you need to have at least a masters degree (social work, counseling, marriage and family therapy). To be eligible for the title of Psychologist, you need to have a doctoral degree.
Shane! When you talk about the most useful degrees and what you refer to as "the real world," you are basically talking about training. It is becoming increasingly difficult in the United States to differentiate training from education. Even today, education is vital. A well trained but uneducated society is a threat to the country's future. If you read today's headlines you will see many manifestations of this threat.
@08:37 I'm confused by this statistic because it says 39,000 jobs available with 7,000 new grads but when they say "available" do they mean jobs in existence and people are working them and not counting the people already employed or do they mean 39,000 jobs that are currently hiring and that number is not actually clear here because the number doesn't say how many people are actually working this field and since this field sometimes counts super peripheral jobs to this like data entry or who knows. Also seems misleading as you say of course they will hire somebody with a degree that they deem as higher in the competency hierarchy such as a physics major over somebody that majored and was trained in this field directly. So how do you quantify that?
Can you do sports related majors such as Kinesiology, Sports Journalism,Sports Management/Admin. It’s becoming a popular major with my graduating class as well as a great field that can use extra research!
What’s your opinion on mycology? It’s one of the majors I’m looking at for college, which I’m starting this fall. The others I’m considering, like forestry and environmental science aren’t too promising
Mycology is so interesting ngl, I'm in my first year of science w education so that I can teach biology chemistry and science. I loveeee microbiology- mycology in particular. You could go into the lab side of things as a technician or something, the industry- eg. biotechnology, research or teaching. If you know what college you're going to, reach out to lecturers and past and present students. Subreddits/facebook groups or even discord servers are a great way to do this. Ask them about job opportunities, how they're finding the course, any advice they have, what books/ resources they'd reccomend you look at to see if you'd be interested in it and also any queries you may have. Don't forget to ask about negative aspects too, such as what they don't like about the course or what they wish they would have done differently, better to learn from other people's mistakes. Good luck with college, I wish you the best!!
Honestly I would choose a broader (micro)biology major, you'd still learn about fungi and can specialise in it later in your (academic) career, but have a broader education to fall back on.
Nothing related to the creative industry? Writers, movie directors, editors, actors, singers, music producers etc... Yes you can get degrees for all of these
Physics, Stats, Math, MIS/IT and CS. Heck, even IE and Econ could (hypothetically) make it into Big Data if they learned some of the skills on their own
Funny thing is I can think of two people that went for something and because they didn’t get enough experience or got dicked around with let’s say a law degree or a marketing degree they then go on and do something else incurring more debt so unfortunate
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My degree has always been useless. MASS MEDIA. Well, nobody told me not pursue something else. I was a first generation college student/graduate. When you come from divorced parents, you lose direction in life. It took me 17 years to graduate from a 4-year school. I had to work full-time as well. So, I've been working as a security officer, which just sucks. Underemployment and working shitty hours.
sorry to hear that! i’m rooting for you, hope it all works out for you. social media marketing, coding especially and UX/UI certificates might complement your major! google has ux/ui classes online and it’s pretty in demand in this day and age.
Damn u wasted ur life 😭
Damn that sucks should’ve gone to a trade school and you still can unless you retired or something
Ouch
What did you major in?
when it comes to a mathematics degree Shane, it would depend on what you study. There is a saying. Applied mathemathics is math to explore the world and Pure Mathematics is math to explore the world of math.
Well he's talking about Bachelors, and a Bachelors in math involves both applied and pure math.
I have a master degree in Applied Maths to Economics and Management, I learned a lot of statistics, operational research, econometrics, a lot of micro and macro economics, a lot of accounting, numerical analysis and algorithms, programming, I attended optional Database related subjects, and I never missed work, only time to do it. I have been working on Business Intelligence and DWH area but also on Software Development area. Even without being an Engineer I already developed software that is used by Engineers. A degree is a pass to a permanent learning process if you choose a more complex one like applied maths you get very good tools to help you learning anything else for the rest of your life.
@@pedrofidalgo8138teaches u how to think?
My guess for #1: Computer Science
Bold
Ez
Hahaha
Its 4 lol
Should I do cs mechanical engineering or electrical engineering
Bachelors in CS with masters in Math/stat would be a hot combo especially if you are looking to go into AI/ML/data science world.
I honestly wish 17-year-old me found this channel! If you are like me and done a useless art/photography degree go and use it (the only time you’ll probably ever use it) to get into a Marketing postgraduate (Masters), you can either use the marketing knowledge to help your photography business or use your photography experience to appeal to employers when applying for a Marketing role. But for the love of god, DO NOT do a masters in another Art subject, do it in something that is likely going to make you more versatile as a professional and any Marketing graduate who also has a creative flair generally has great advantage
Even if you have graduated in a photography degree, don’t despair I know a few people that have gotten into marketing assistant roles (one of my old classmates even becoming an assistant creative director) because employers are thinking “if I teach them basic marketing I could save money on creative content if and when we need it and won’t need to get a freelancer in” and if you’re let’s say half way through your degree, then make your work more commercialised (work that businesses can use to promote themselves). It’s your best option really, if you get yourself into a marketing role (creative content) you’ll be doing more photography (along with other things) work than your classmates that are still working in McDonalds (or a crappy office job if lucky) 6 years after graduating
Just some justification for going for a health sciences degree next year :) Thank you for this in-depth analysis on these degrees!
winner.
So, studied economics. Economics lets you read the newspaper and know what comes next whether its reading the economic cycle, knowing the response of government agencies, or reading into broad patterns. There is also the fact that a ton of rich ppl who have kids often study economics, and economics majors tend to be the ones working at banks or running hedge funds. I'd say its more correlative because let's be honest, half the curriculum is made up and not particularly rigorous outside its own academic scope.
Wow thanks Shane. Mine is on number 5-Management Information Systems 💁♀️
I'm happy 😊
Can IT Management be used the same way?
@Kian Naicker kindly explain a little
How about Information systems (IS)??
Very hard choice to choose, Computer Science or Accountant. So many things I want to do. It’s so vast
Design + Tech combination is a great skillset to have.
Design + Tech + Business + Problem Solving is excellent.
Mans forgot a culinary/professional cooking degree. Can find work anywhere you go with that one, not to mention learning to cook for yourself is a huge plus
*FINANCE JOB W/O FINANCE DEGREE*
You dont need a finance degree to get a good job in finance you just need to find a firm to sponsor you to take the exams to be registered to sell securities.
THIS, my boyfriends mom majored in something random and now makes 6 figures in a finance job
Make a “top 10 reasons why gender studies is useless” video
Any degree maths related that helps companies solving problems maximizing profit and reducing costs is a good degree. Typically maths is mandatory for all of that. Programming in any language that allows modelling the problem (Java, Python, VBA, C#, SQL, PLSQL, Mathematica, R, etc) as most problems these days process huge amounts of data and cannot be solved or analyzed manually, handling data against a database (e.g. if you need to build a management decision dashboard that analyzes last 5 year sales you really really need to have basic SQL knowledge as data will be stored on a database for sure), understanding basic data structures, and if highly production related subjects physics, mechanics or other more detailed subjects are important. One huge and highly relevant area for companies is Operational Research. The best idea in my opinion is to deeply learn all above subjects and after that specialize on several management areas that allow persons to understand companies management principles, but typically any person that is good at maths understands every single management concept quite easy as all economical and management concepts start on the basic +/- operator (debt / credit) and end in forex trading concepts that in the end also have maths formulas behind (typically highly related to statistics, expected values and others).
What I meant is to work on a company these days some basic skills will always be required, know how to use Excel very well for instance will be mandatory for almost anyone these days.
If you know how to automate things using VBA with it even better .... can save you a huge amount of time on repetitive tasks.
13:40 I agree with you. I’m a math major, and I am trying to learn programming skills, and I am also doing the pre-med track because I’m very sure that I will not get a job related to pure mathematics 😅
Change majors
@@Rain_love292 🤣
@Kierstin Schwarz
Not really. You have to go all into medicine
id say if you are able to publish some papers on pure mathematics of your own, then only pursue pure mathematics, otherwise its a teaching job at the end of the road.
Basically…being good with numbers or programming. And that’s what a lot of people are not good at.
Many people do biology or humanities because they are bad at mathematics and coding
Still in 10th grade but having trouble in finding a college course, early and wise decision the better. Thankyou for your video rlly helpful :>
Go do the ones which are multidisciplinary.
Actually degrees are like toilet paper without experience.
I’m deciding between accounting or finance
That moment when computer science is actually not #1………
im taking computer science and holly shit is it hard and interesting at the same time.
36 years old and can figure out what I wanna do 😩
What are you doing currently? Do you have a family?
#1 Bachelors of Science Medical Lab Science. 99% guaranteed job after graduation.
Im doing biomed, im so glad I got to a degree where i can still end up making a good salary and be able to study what I enjoy, health sciences are the GOATs
I had a great video suggestion idea. :The most or top scalable careers/jobs. For instance someone working in tech sales have little to no limits on how much income they can bring in, or and entrepreneur, or a lawyer, jobs that require gigs. I would love this!!
Have you ever thought about doing a video on online certifications like google’s etc…
I’ve heard great things about google’s and other companies but there’s so many options
Shane please make videos about these degrees
1. Business analytics
2. Biomedical sciences
Which is more useful?
2. Biomedical sciences
I would choose business analytics
Business analytics is something I wanna know more about as well
It depends what you mean by 'useful'.
Biomedical sciences will get you higher pay and may even contribute to the world.
Economics is a Liberal Arts degree but has a lot of Mathematics, Business & Politics
Second time he says that the College Degree Ranker will be shown in the video, only for it to not be there. What gives?
Relax.
MIS for the win‼️💰
It’s my concentration 🙃
Hey Shane, can you please do a video on a construction management degree? It would be very helpful, thank you.
You are a TV company
id id my masters in international human rights law and i wrote my dissertation on the Maputo Protocl and so i taught myself how to defend my african wife and htat's very important ot me
i think i just found out my lost motivation for pressing on with med school 🏥
Double major student here.. Business Admin with a concentration in Information Systems ☺️
I feel like some of these numbers are a little low. My dad makes 140k a year with a nursing degree and my friend whos a computer science major like me got offered a 200k salary working for google straight out of college. I guess the averages eventually average out but they just seem low to me.
working for google is not the average 😂😂😂. what school did they graduate from??
Question. Do i need to be really good at math to major in CS? I want to, but i’ve never been skilled in math so I’d like to hear your opinion
I probably have skipped a few videos but what is a "meaning score"?
You don't really need a degree for computer science, you can learn programming for free but a degree does make you look more professional.
I'm new to the channel so I have some questions:
1, is the statistics apply for a certain country or worldwide
2, can u check the statistics of a job/degree in a specific country.
Thank u ❤️
The graduates are from the U.S but it can still apply to other counties, I assume pay is different
Wow, my home economics/ Economics course is on the list, thanks shane...
Any time!
Will you now merge Computer Science and Computer Engineering degrees together since you didn't mention it at all and you have always spoken highly of Computer Engineering?
What do you think, which is better: economics or business administration?
Schools here in my country does not offer MIS, the only schools that offer them are the most prestigious schools with expensive (af) tuition fee and hours away from home. It sucks cuz i really want to take MIS. Might take marketing or finance instead 😏
There are a lot of schools that offer MIS/CIS through their business school. Every school I have attended has had the major offered. Texas Southern, Wiley, Arizona State, University of Houston
Can you please make a video of "Top 10 Most Useful Engineering College Degrees (2022)"?
Love the video but I desperately wish people realized we wouldn't have the opportunity to pursue anything related to finance or software development if we didn't have a balanced ecosystem. Nature is painfully taken for fucking granted and it's mind-blowing.
What about geography and earth science
I’d also add Human Resource Management to the list…EVERY company has HR departments…hospitals, hotel chains, school systems, etc. it’s a very versatile degree across multiple industries 😊
yeah but everyone hates HR employees and the initiatives you have to launch are overly politicised/culture wars etc so not great for a lot of people.
but you don't need a HRM degree to work in HR, plus the pay isn't great due to oversaturation of HR people.
@@daveray5655 yea but you don’t need a marketing degree to work in marketing, or a finance degree to work in accounting either 🤷🏻♂️
People can get HR jobs for every majors. Also, MBA get most of HR jobs nowadays. Good luck
@@coning1824 Ive since gained my MS in Occupational Safety Management. Luck not needed
Where do you find the stats like job meaning mid career pay? Like the website you use
Is marketing or advertising a better degree?
Me currently getting my degree in IT Business management 💯
Math majors have to take Discrete math which is the main mathematical foundation for data structures and algorithms. Add to that math majors usually have to take "computer science 1" which at my school is under IT and called "Intro to Scripting". Latwr on I will be required to huild mathematical and statistical models in python for the Applied Math concentration. But evej withoutbthe concentration you WILL be coding as a math major in most cases these days at leaat onna basic level.
Finance has always peaked my interest but do you not think most finance jobs will be automated soon?
But that particular automation will help the Finance Professional's
My current major is IT Management, is that pretty similar to MIS?
pretty much. basically IT management places more emphasis on managing IT workers whereas MIS involves implementing and managing information systems. but the jobs for both would be the same depending on the courses taken
I agree with you, Shane! Enjoyed this video.
What about criminology? I'm thinking about pursuing criminology
Can you please do a video on the most useful online nursing courses
Can you please make a video on the prospects of public health and bioinformatics, Please?What is the future ,pros and cons of studying both of these subjects?
Can you do a video on Data Analytics?
Wheres the timestamp guy😥
Can anyone tell me which one will be a good degree.
1. Management information systems
2. Finance and Technology
Watch these videos, Ahmed.
-Is a MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS degree worth it?
ruclips.net/video/EMGvP6hav_U/видео.html
-Is Finance A Good Major?
ruclips.net/video/zwKrd76eWeM/видео.html
-The BEST Technology Degrees
ruclips.net/video/lD_8-v1nPrE/видео.html
does a male nurse have an advantage
There are less of them. Some patients prefer or only request male nurses
What do you mean by meaning score?
Pls put some time stamps
Sad to see supply chain missed on this list!!
What do you think of a biomedical science major? Thanks
Can i study management and statistics and become a cooperative lawyer please?
Thank you this was so helpful
In b4 engineering and computer science are some arrangement of #1 and #2.
Is a psychology degree worth it? Could you make a video about degrees that deal with interacting with others like counseling, teaching, or something of that sort?
He doesn't have a video specifically about helping people but he does have different videos concerning each degree that you mentioned. In short, and I agree with him, psychology isn't a great option unless you are willing and understand that you will probably need to get a masters to work in the field.
I love psychology. It is a very interesting topic, but it is so hard to get a job as a psychologist. If you are already doing the psychology degree, don't feel bad; use this a motivation to go to the next step, a master's degree. Good luck!!
It’s good subject to understand but usueless to major in, STEM all the way.
He had a video on the most useless degrees & the 1st one was psychology.
You won't go very far with a BS/BA in psychology. To work in mental healthcare, you need to have at least a masters degree (social work, counseling, marriage and family therapy). To be eligible for the title of Psychologist, you need to have a doctoral degree.
Shane! When you talk about the most useful degrees and what you refer to as "the real world," you are basically talking about training. It is becoming increasingly difficult in the United States to differentiate training from education. Even today, education is vital. A well trained but uneducated society is a threat to the country's future. If you read today's headlines you will see many manifestations of this threat.
@08:37 I'm confused by this statistic because it says 39,000 jobs available with 7,000 new grads but when they say "available" do they mean jobs in existence and people are working them and not counting the people already employed or do they mean 39,000 jobs that are currently hiring and that number is not actually clear here because the number doesn't say how many people are actually working this field and since this field sometimes counts super peripheral jobs to this like data entry or who knows. Also seems misleading as you say of course they will hire somebody with a degree that they deem as higher in the competency hierarchy such as a physics major over somebody that majored and was trained in this field directly. So how do you quantify that?
Good to see that both of my majors are on here
Thank You.
Can you make also a video about Health informatics major? I think that one of the rare major and I really want to know more about. thanks
Can you do sports related majors such as Kinesiology, Sports Journalism,Sports Management/Admin. It’s becoming a popular major with my graduating class as well as a great field that can use extra research!
Here's My Opinion On Exercise Science Degrees
ruclips.net/video/ElSmvGi3JN8/видео.html
Marketing major here 👏 🙌 👌
The quality is crispier, no? 🔥
Also…
Thoughts on Industrial Design?
What’s your opinion on mycology? It’s one of the majors I’m looking at for college, which I’m starting this fall. The others I’m considering, like forestry and environmental science aren’t too promising
Mycology is so interesting ngl, I'm in my first year of science w education so that I can teach biology chemistry and science. I loveeee microbiology- mycology in particular. You could go into the lab side of things as a technician or something, the industry- eg. biotechnology, research or teaching. If you know what college you're going to, reach out to lecturers and past and present students. Subreddits/facebook groups or even discord servers are a great way to do this. Ask them about job opportunities, how they're finding the course, any advice they have, what books/ resources they'd reccomend you look at to see if you'd be interested in it and also any queries you may have. Don't forget to ask about negative aspects too, such as what they don't like about the course or what they wish they would have done differently, better to learn from other people's mistakes. Good luck with college, I wish you the best!!
Honestly I would choose a broader (micro)biology major, you'd still learn about fungi and can specialise in it later in your (academic) career, but have a broader education to fall back on.
Planning to take Information Systems (IS)?? is it similar to MIS??
What is your view on financial mathematics degrees
hey where's that list you said you'll share in the description? please share it!
Nothing related to the creative industry? Writers, movie directors, editors, actors, singers, music producers etc... Yes you can get degrees for all of these
What about kinesiology
Thx. What about Big Data which is becoming in demand ?
Physics, Stats, Math, MIS/IT and CS. Heck, even IE and Econ could (hypothetically) make it into Big Data if they learned some of the skills on their own
I agree with what Pablo said. I would add data science, although most schools only have that at the grad level.
My guess is nursing, engineering, finance, according
Im interested in economics, business and finance which one should i pursue
Also in my school I have economics and maths as my main subjects
joint major of economics and finance?
I was wondering what you , Chris thought of Cyber Crime or Justice Degrees. As being useful and in- demand jobs??
Where can I find the college degree ranker?
Thank you Shane.
1:04 sharing the degree ranker where??
I would like to have it too
Perhaps he deleted it
Aren't jobs in statistics endangered of being phased out by AI?
Im Studying accounting now should i switch to Political Science&PublicAdministration ?
How about Multimedia is it a good degree and can I get a job with it?
Funny thing is I can think of two people that went for something and because they didn’t get enough experience or got dicked around with let’s say a law degree or a marketing degree they then go on and do something else incurring more debt so unfortunate
Hey Shane, I would like your opinion about a public health degree.
Please more videos about industrial engineering it is not talked about enough aslo difference between it and business mangment which better ??
Can you do a video about hospitality degree
what’s your thought on BS Technology management?
My most useful degree is economics!!
I want to know if getting a certification in IT is worth it or is getting a degree in IT more valuable.
What about ict?
Is MIS the same as CIS?
Hi shane
Can I add arabic translation to your videos and re upload them? So you reach more audience?