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I'm interested to see what you all think of this story/topic.
http://www.madison.com/wsj/forums/viewtopic.php?t=71826
http://www.madison.com/wsj/forums/viewtopic.php?t=71826
i dont see how one can present a logical argument against him. perhaps his school's system of majors is in disarray, but the dude himself did nothing wrong. would the courses he would have to take in order to complete a physics major be different if he had done ONLY physics instead of 5 majors?
no, they wouldnt. so what is the problem here? his competency in the courses is irrelevant lol (even though im sure he's fine considering his 3.9). and knowing what he wants? again, irrelevant. he pay the money, so he can take whatever he wants.
i agree that something is wrong if he can do 5 majors in four years, but thats the school's fault, not his.
I honestly think majoring in five majors is dumb. Beyond remembering a few things from various classes, all of those majors will be useless when it comes to the job market. He has to have an employable skills. From what I can tell, he must not work.
I can see physics and math being fine though. The rest are a waste of his time. He would have been better of working in a physics lab, since that is what he wants to go to graduate school for.
Some smart people are just dumb.
Some smart people are just dumb.
I was wondering if this was about UW Madison before I even looked at the link...
I have many friends who graduated from/are attending Madison, and this is pretty common. Five majors may be unique, but someone graduating with three is definitely not. I find it pretty ridiculous, but maybe just because I'm jealous that I can't say that I simultaneously majored in computer science, women's studies, Gaelic, and Theremin performance.
I don't see how you could fault the student for taking additional courses if he wants to. If he wants to get a broad education, there's nothing wrong with that in my opinion. There is absolutely something wrong with the curriculum at UW though ... it shouldn't be possible to get so many majors in so few years with only 18 credits per term.
Ya I agree. This suggests the school has an issue if a student can do 5 majors in four years. It didn't even sound like he worked that hard.
At my school you can't get multiple majors with the same class. 1 class can apply to a major and a MINOR but not to two majors. So if you are double majoring in related subjects you have to take DIFFERENT courses to apply to each major (Aside from the general requirements like gen chem and o.chem which are the same for multiple majors)
I guess some schools let you take a course and have it apply to every major it applies to equally.
Worst part is that his GPA is a 3.9. A lot of people can't even pull that off with just one major.
I have a friend who did 4 majors and still had time to play world of warcraft at UofIllinois - Physics, Math, Aviation and Chemistry. The first three were, as he put it, the trifecta of majors to landing the job he has now. He did chemistry because he said it was easy🙂mad🙂. It CAN be done, and it's not really lame or stupid.
My physics professor went to UW Madison and quadruple majored in physics, chemistry, biology, and philosophy. I used to be really impressed by that, but not so much anymore after reading this thread.
Here we can either:
a) single major.
b) double major.
c) major and minor
That's it...and there is really no way to do any more than that even if you are incredibly smart and ambitious, you'd have to petition to do three and you'd get turned down. There's no way that this kid's classes were tough. With a 3.9? Pssh, there's no way.
I agree. Its like instead of having 5 majors he quintuple minored.
yeah. but quintuple minoring still seems weird to me; at my school minors are usually 6 classes or so... that's a lot to do five times over when you've got major reqs and gen ed reqs to finish as well.
I know the dude in the story is completely off his rocker. I did not actually read the story, but did the dude finish his degree in 4 years?
Reminds me of a story a college buddy told me. He was a sociology major and he found that he was really enjoying the history electives he had taken and realized that he was only about three courses shy of meeting a history major as well. He met with his advisor in Soc. and asked about double-majoring with soc. and history, and the soc. advisor said, "Why? So your degree can be twice as useless in the job market?"
I could hear that coming from a pragmatic business or engineering school person, but it kind of shocked me that a soc. advisor would be that blunt about it.
***
French: Why? You want to live in France for a few years? You want to translate documents from English to French and vise versa?
Math: This is a fine degree, if you have a teaching certificate or go on to graduate school.
Physics: This is a fine degree if you are willing to be a research tech/assistant or getting a teach certificate until you go to graduate school.
Philosphy: See my example in the paragraph above.
Astronomy: Not sure why besides going to graduate school. Never once have I come across a job asking for a degree in astronomy.
French is fine if you target specific jobs or the degree is useless.
Only on SDN would a guy like this get bashed![]()
i agree that something is wrong if he can do 5 majors in four years, but thats the school's fault, not his.
exactly. my major had like 60-70 credits in it (lots of overlap with pre-med reqs, though 🙂). i could not have done four of those in four years. i think the average majors have 35-40 credits at my school, which would still be impossible to do four times over while satisfying the general ed requirements. this article makes me think that UW's system is messed up.
Reminds me of a story a college buddy told me. He was a sociology major and he found that he was really enjoying the history electives he had taken and realized that he was only about three courses shy of meeting a history major as well. He met with his advisor in Soc. and asked about double-majoring with soc. and history, and the soc. advisor said, "Why? So your degree can be twice as useless in the job market?"
I could hear that coming from a pragmatic business or engineering school person, but it kind of shocked me that a soc. advisor would be that blunt about it.
***
French: Why? You want to live in France for a few years? You want to translate documents from English to French and vise versa?
Math: This is a fine degree, if you have a teaching certificate or go on to graduate school.
Physics: This is a fine degree if you are willing to be a research tech/assistant or getting a teach certificate until you go to graduate school.
Philosphy: See my example in the paragraph above.
Astronomy: Not sure why besides going to graduate school. Never once have I come across a job asking for a degree in astronomy.
French is fine if you target specific jobs or the degree is useless.
I think too many majors shows and inability to make up your mind about what interests you. You can study all those things on your own without getting credits for it by being an avid reader and self teacher to yourself to learn those topics.
God forbid people do something they enjoy. The purpose of education is - or ought to be - more than providing vocational training.
It's a ridiculous attitude to have. Maybe the kid was interested in Math, Physics and Astronomy. Those subjects are very related. Not everything has to be done with a job in mind. It's possible to do something out of simply enjoyment of the subject.
This is one of the things I hate about modern education. You can go to vocational school if you want career training (e.g, ITT tech, law school, med school, etc). The purpose of higher education is something else, or at least, should be.
Or if its possible, you can just major in it. What's the difference?
I hire people, at while this may not be a widely held view, I respect and admire people with wide interests and people who are curious about the world they live in. Yes, that includes sociology majors and history majors. Most of the training for a job can be done on the job - and usually is. I want people who are intellectually curious. Getting a job is a secondary benefit to a classic liberal arts education - go to a vocational school if you want to learn a skill.
Doing something one enjoys and using up resources that could be used by others, in this type of setting, is not being smart. It is being selfish. We go to school to learn about a topic that we can translate into an employment situation for an employer or to run your own business.
We don't go to college to learn history for the heck of it. We don't go to school to get an accounting degree for the heck of it. You go to school to get the required basic skills need to do a job. That is the end point of college.
The guy, from what I've been told by current students at Madison, has no job. So he has no skills to offer an employer. So he goes to graduate school in physics never having worked a job before. If I ever get into a position where I help make choices for who gets into a professional schooling, I will never accept a student with no work experience.
So I don't get a degree in World Literature or Story Telling and that means I don't give a crap about those topics? You are out of your flipping mind.
News flash: College is the new "on the job training." How the heck could you not notice that?
You seriously make hiring decisions? I would hate to see how productive your staff is.
That's just disturbing. I want to find where it says, in UW's charter, that its mission is to train students for a job.
So UW should not train students for a job?
No, that's the end point of a vocational school. You may go to college to get a job, but that's not the purpose of college. If that were the purpose, colleges would simply be vocational schools and have no need for half the departments. College is about intellectual development of individuals, for the sake of intellectual development. That is the purpose of higher education. For the vast majority of jobs, I could teach them all the skills they need in a couple months. That's not what colleges do.
You are wrong once again. Finance, accounting, business, nursing, child life, biology, education, etc, are all degrees to place you in a job. Liberal Art degrees (the schools who offer them) are under major pressure right now to show that the degrees are even worth anything. Don't believe, look it up in a Google search for yourself.
Just so you know, college is the new high school. It has been like this for almost a decade already.
Let's all get degrees in the liberal arts and see how far we get in the job search.
Interviewer: So why are you interested in this position when you got a degree in French, physics, math, astronomy, and philosophy. This position requires you to follow specific protocols and you will be doing a lot of routine work.
Applicant: Well,...................
And that's your perogative. And professional school is a vocational school, and I'd look for work experience too. A university, as whole, is not designed to be a vocational school.
Huh? You can be interested in it and get a major in it, and you can be interested in it and not major in it. He chose the former. UW should be happy that they have a student who is intellectually curious and they are doing their job by fostering his development and interests.
Actually, the UW found out that they have major problems with their curriculum.
It is, and I do see it. But that's not what the mission of university is. Employers look for kids with college degrees. And colleges do best to give them enough skills. That's not, nor should it be, their primary purpose. If it was pure vocational training, most schools wouldn't require courses in the liberal arts - just like ITT tech doesn't require shakespeare when you get a programming certificate.
Yes employers do look for applicants with college degrees...specific college degrees. Good luck getting an editor job as a college graduate with a degree in physics.
I have a company, and I do fine because I hire smart, driven people who are curious about the world. I am not the font of all wisdom but it has worked very well for me so far. Maybe it hasn't for you. I prefer to interact with those people, and so do my customers. They have a broad and mature outlook, they seek out challenges no matter what the field and what their personal expertise, and offer creative solutions, and they make the best employees. If my business involved doing task A, B, C in a prescribed manner, then perhaps they wouldn't be.
What is the name of your company?
And while it is possible to be all of those things by picking a single major, one of the things I look for are wide interests, and if someone has a degree in physics and sociology, I am immediately interested in that person and want to talk to them.
That should not be their primary purpose.So UW should not train students for a job?
I believe you, and I completely agree. And it's a sad state of affairs that vocational training has gotten mixed up with higher education.You are wrong once again. Finance, accounting, business, nursing, child life, biology, education, etc, are all degrees to place you in a job. Liberal Art degrees (the schools who offer them) are under major pressure right now to show that the degrees are even worth anything. Don't believe, look it up in a Google search for yourself.
Again, I agree. I am arguing how it should be, and what colleges should do, and what they exist for, not their current state.Just so you know, college is the new high school. It has been like this for almost a decade already.
As I've said before, if you are looking for vocational training, that is not the right path for you. Not everyone is looking for vocational training. People do things because it interests them, as hard as it may be for you to believe. I think that students know that majoring in sociology will not be as financially rewarding as a major in IT. I don't want a college degree so I can get a job. You do, and that's GREAT. Go for it. Major in whatever you want which allows you to get that job that you covet. That doesn't mean colleges should only cater to you. Some people just want to learn, and do something that is intellectually stimulating for them. No one is forcing you to do that if that isn't what you want.Let's all get degrees in the liberal arts and see how far we get in the job search.
That should not be their primary purpose.
I believe you, and I completely agree. And it's a sad state of affairs that vocational training has gotten mixed up with higher education.
Again, I agree. I am arguing how it should be, and what colleges should do, and what they exist for, not their current state.
As I've said before, if you are looking for vocational training, that is not the right path for you. Not everyone is looking for vocational training. People do things because it interests them, as hard as it may be for you to believe. I think that students know that majoring in sociology will not be as financially rewarding as a major in IT. I don't want a college degree so I can get a job. You do, and that's GREAT. Go for it. Major in whatever you want which allows you to get that job that you covet. That doesn't mean colleges should only cater to you. Some people just want to learn, and do something that is intellectually stimulating for them. No one is forcing you to do that if that isn't what you want.
The rest of your answers is a variation on the same theme, showing why a liberal arts degree is not ideal vocational training. And I agree.
Nor should it be.
You said it yourself...colleges should not prepare their students for a job.
Four jobs that pay $50 an hour that are still in demand:
Pharmacist
Actuary
Marketing manager
Petroleum engineer
What do these four jobs have in common? Specific college degrees.