Which college degree(s) is the most beneficial for your life overall?

Which college degree(s) is the most beneficial for your life overall?

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none
/thread

Nowadays it matters little what it is, unless you plan to go to grad school. Your college degree is going to show on your resume that you can at least commit to something.

the one which provides you with work that you will enjoy more

Only go if you’re intelligent enough to get through engineering

Otherwise it’s a meme

one in a field that interests you, you will spend a bunch of your waking hours as an adult in this job so getting a degree in something you dont enjoy will bring you nothing. if you are good and passionate about what you do you will be successfull...

Whichever one helps you get a better job

/thread.

Nah not really OP something genuinely impressive to pass like Medicine or Maths. Something like Engineering.

At the end of hte day if you don't use it for a directly relevant career, and you probably won't because you have no plan what to do, it's just an I Am Smart certificate. So get something that normies think is smart.

Depends on the school. Electro-mechanical Engineering is the way to go, though.

Law

Vocational (relevant nationally accredited) degrees like nursing, medicine, physiotherapy, nutrition, OT, engineering, law, etc. If you plan on going into non vocational science you need to plan for the long haul and consider at least a masters to get into working in labs and or research. It's better to do the broadest area of the science you're interested in though and specialise later. An example of this is biology/chemistry/biochemistry, where biochemistry tends to be a bad idea to study at undergrad level because by the time you get to post grad you won't know enough chemistry to specialise down the chemistry side of bio chem, and you won't know enough bio to do that either. If you do specialise early, make sure you do something vocational.

not going to college and learning a trade
t. math graduate
it's honestly fucking trash, and I don't even think much of math itself nowadays. it's pure, useless autism.
plus in my country most college degrees are worthless

not business fir sure
it's a fucking scam

It depends where you live. I've got Bachelor's in electro-mechanical engineering and in fucking Eastern Europe it means nothing. I graduated with a very decent GPA and awesome final thesis graded as one of the best in the history of my Uni and still no decent jobs there.

If you are from the USA user don't bother yourself with getting a degree, start your own business or learn to code.

based

Yeah dude, doctors are so poor with their $500k/yr.

This was good advice 40 years ago. Law is an over saturated profession now, with a highly competitive hiring process that is fraught with nepotism. It can be a rewarding career but it is no guarantee of job placement and is very unlikely to wind up being very lucrative. If it's the "family business" so to speak then you stand a much better chance with a network already in place.

I graduated law school 6 years ago and have found a job that I enjoy but believe me when I say that I'm in no danger of getting rich. The job is interesting and mentally stimulating but for the investment law is not a great choice.

Seek H1b1 greencard and study or work in USA, that at lest is my plan

Depends on what you want out of life. Pick something that you have some talent for though, and avoid degrees that are a mindless grind (e.g. law or medicine) unless you need them for whatever you want to do. Also anything that isn’t STEM or at a top tier uni won’t do much for your career prospects, so keep that in mind

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Tbh engineering or some other creative thing like chemistry. If you're willing to work you'll always have a job. It will probably be a shitty one but you'll have a job.

>Engineering
>impressive
you havin a giggle m8?
Anyone can pass engineering. If you've got a gpa somewhere between 4.0 to 3.4 I agree, but barely sneaking through isn't really hard.

Thanks user, I'll think about it. Just one year left to finish my Master's and I'll be free to go.

>tfw french
>tfw here, uni is where you go when you have failed at life
>people who are actually good go to insanely selective "grandes écoles"
>tfw when you go to uni your chances of getting a job are the same as if you hadn't finished high school

>mfw graduated with high gpa, extremely suited for studying law but loved making short films and won an award
>not one but BOTH industries i'd love to go into are oversaturated and fraught with nepotism/cronyism
why couldnt i be born smart enough for med school fucking end me

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If you don't know what to do in your life don't go to university. You'll just lose money and time, do what you like and become in the top 1% and you will never be starving.

CS is pretty based
Teaches you problem solving skills, pays ridiculously good, and it's fun

I think philosophy & the fine arts is best for personal development, but no one will take you seriously because it has the reputation of being easy.

Next best thing is something that requires abstract thinking and logically prooving stuff like maths or physics because it generalizes well to philosophy (and personal development in general), is respected and pays pretty good.

IT is an industry where titles are irrelevant, all that is taught on CS studies can be learned in 1 year for free.

But true, if someone likes it is an extremely pleasant career path.

>being 50k in debt for """personal development""" and no career prospects
you are either retarded or trust fund babby

A Masters degree in having rich parents.

>IT is an industry where titles are irrelevant
Agree, but only if you want to work as a software engineer. If that's what you want to do, good shit!
Personally I'm interested in AI research, and you need some good math skills and at least a masters degree to get into that, so I'm glad I'm in college.

I agree, but only because I've enjoyed learning CS since highschool.
The whole learning to program thing is a meme. If you don't genuinely enjoy CS or programming it's gonna suck.
I remember tons of students in cs101 classes that were just there because they thought a programming job pays well, but couldn't write a simple for loop.

I did a msc in statistics which is supposed to be a hot area but haven't been able to land my first job

Yeah, I've noticed that too.
I honestly think if you don't already know programming somewhat well before going to college you're doing something wrong. It's really something you need to teach yourself by just making stuff.

Nursing/MD.

Based

>ctrl +f
>no Computer Science
c'mon, fellas. I'm a 100 IQ brainlet who got a CS degree from a no-name state school in 2012 and now I make $110,000 a year in a medium cost of living city in Maryland (reeee i miss Virginia). you don't even need to be good at programming to make good money or get a job with a CS degree. most people who haven't worked in the industry assume all you do is code but probably only half the guys use tools that are largely GUI based. think about your Blackboard site when you're in college, my job is basically to administer and modify that for our business needs, I don't really ever code anything.

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Retarded american