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<p>Anything is easier said than done:</p>
<p>[Harvard</a> Graduate from Fresno earns 4.0 GPA (the followup) - YouTube](<a href=“http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4NLI1XDZZPs]Harvard”>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4NLI1XDZZPs)</p>
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<p>The question you need to ask yourself is this: how much of net value does a BA in biology or humanities bring to the table, and is it worth the investment.</p>
<p>I would argue that, a BA in humanities from a non-ranked State U does not give anyone any significant employment opportunities, even compared to high school drop outs. Only thing that changed was that those with a BA in a non-marketable major just wasted 4 years of their lives, and 4 years behind in labor force. I know too far many working as bartenders, waiters, bouncers, and the like, despite having a college diploma. (17 million people like that in the U.S.)</p>
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<p>Companies enforce that barrier to filter out applicants. It is a mechanism for filtering. However, as specified before, there is a huge over-supply of college graduates and college students relative to jobs, so on individual basis, attending a college “just to survive the HR screening at corporation X,Y,Z” is a horrible idea.</p>
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<p>Look. There is no downside of skipping out on college, provided that the best option you have is to attend a directional State U and majoring in poly sci or bio. </p>
<p>You save a ton of money and time. In the meanwhile, you can focus on developing actual skills that are of value to employers. (such as IT skills)</p>
<p>Like mentioned before, many of IT related jobs are rather indifferent to someone’s academic credentials. After all, the very top dogs in IT industry all happen to be college or high school drop outs. </p>
<p>In case you find that you indeed need a BA in poli sci or psychology to gain an entry level job at corporation X,Y,Z (which I doubt), then you can always go back to school. In the U.S., getting into a college is so easy anyone can do it at any time. </p>
<p>Education, here in U.S., is ridiculously expensive. The cost of tuition here is like 10 times more expensive compared to Western Europe or even Canada. Hence, be very cautious about the rate of return on your investment, is my point.</p>
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<p>Life is all about trade offs. You need to incur certain level of sacrifices to achieve something decent. No one is going to hand you out a job, just because you have a college diploma. Like I said, there are millions of college grads, in excess supply, relative to jobs available. Go into an easy path where everyone else goes into, then you end up hitting the barrier named “rule of supply vs demand”. The point being, you should strive to develop your skill sets that are in demand from the labor force. Good luck getting a decent job with a BA in biology, in case you strike out at med school admissions.</p>
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<p>Ugh, no. Finance and accounting are easy majors. Both are significantly easier than most of science premed courses, both in terms of conceptual rigor and grading.</p>
<p>Heck, finance/ accounting are even easier than Econ.</p>
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<p>Like I said, life is all about trade offs. The downside of going through engineering is, as you mention, you need to work harder than others. The upside, is, you actually can get a career-track job after graduation, which can’t be said for thousands of others in humanities/biology/chemistry degrees.</p>
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<p>My point, all along, has been that it is a TERRIBLE idea to attend a college just to have a small % shot at clearing those HR screens at corporations X,Y,Z for the reasons mentioned above.</p>
<p>In U.S., attending a college (and worse, grad school) is just too damn expensive to do it mindlessly. It incurs significant opportunity and financial costs to do so.</p>
<p>I would argue that going to a college makes sense if: 1) You get into a top college (and hence have a shot at a lucrative corporate job after graduation regardless of major), OR 2) You are talented enough in math related subjects and hence can handle the rigors of math/ stats/ engineering courses, 3) You plan to major in finance/ accounting, OR 4) You are talented in networking and can build strong professional network and internships while in college.</p>
<p>If you don’t meet any of the above criteria, I think you are better served skipping out college. Learn some skills that are of value to employers. Worst comes worst, you can always go back to school, if things don’t work out. Mindlessly going to a college (or worse yet, grad school) does not solve any problem for anyone. There are millions, MILLIONS in this country who are stuck in dead-end retail jobs, despite having college diplomas. Those millions, I suspect, might have been better off not going to a college in the first place.</p>