CashMoneyCane
Mahoney 7
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2017
- Messages
- 4,477
Yes. Primarily because if you get a bachelor's degree in a soft science (like sociology or psychology) or a hard life/physical science (biology, physics, etc) you typically need a Master's degree, AT LEAST, to do anything with it in that field.
Further, how could this even begin to account for degrees like math or English, or even economics, where any job would be "related" to your major?
I'd say the extreme, extreme vast majority of people I went to school with (business) took jobs directly in line with their majors.