Alot of major in mind

<p>I'm into a few majors. Can the nice people from CC help me choose 2(double majoring) that we benefit me in this economy.
B.S. Accounting
B.A. Economics
B.S. Economics
B.S. Psychology
B.S. Finance
B.S. Civil Engineering
B.S. Electrical Engineering
B.S. English
B.S. Business Admin</p>

<p>Thank you</p>

<p>Bump…</p>

<p>Sent from my SCH-I535 using CC</p>

<p>Bump again</p>

<p>Sent from my SCH-I535 using CC</p>

<p>I’m into a few majors. Can the nice people from CC help me choose 2(double majoring) that we benefit me in this economy.
B.S. Accounting
B.A. Economics
B.S. Economics
B.S. Psychology
B.S. Finance
B.S. Civil Engineering
B.S. Electrical Engineering
B.S. English
B.S. Business Admin</p>

<p>All of them will benefit you in this economy except for english and psychology. BS in economics is (in my opinion as an econ major) more marketable. As far as double majoring, depending on your college, doubling with anything in engineering will be tough. Engineering programs are not only the longest but the hardest. A</p>

<p>my suggestions: </p>

<p>Accounting and Finance</p>

<p>Finance and Business Admin </p>

<p>Econ and Finance</p>

<p>Thanks actually I was thinking accounting and finance first lol how is being a econ major do u do a lot of math </p>

<p>Sent from my SCH-I535 using CC</p>

<p>I would not do Business Admin alone - double it with finance or some other complimentary major. I have known many business majors who are too generalized to find a decent position right out of college - unless they went to a top school and had impressive internships. If you choose this route you would need more than a high GPA to discuss in your interview and to put on your resume. Leadership experience for clubs/organizations, internships, and part-time employment in a business setting are all important.</p>

<p>Minoring in psychology can be useful (I have a BA in psychology but would not suggest majoring in it unless it’s doubled with something else - I moved into Human Resource Management). But a minor is useful for business administration - not so much for accounting or engineering.</p>

<p>Are you able to contact people in these fields and try to do some job shadowing to get some real ideas on what life would be like working in these professions? </p>

<p>If you are concerned about math, you may want to look at the engineering programs to see what they require, as these are intensive programs that require dedication to succeed.</p>

<p>Thanks I think I’m good for accounting and Econ they seem interesting</p>

<p>Sent from my SCH-I535 using CC</p>