<p>So I'm tired of reading about psych and bio majors, so just to make this interesting, how odd is your major?</p>
<p>Religious Studies.</p>
<p>So I'm tired of reading about psych and bio majors, so just to make this interesting, how odd is your major?</p>
<p>Religious Studies.</p>
<p>Religion is indeed an obscure and odd concept for me to grasp.</p>
<p>psychology</p>
<p>biology major</p>
<p>lol @ psych and bio.</p>
<p>I don’t think my major (geography) is that odd, but I have gotten funny looks from people who ask what my major is. I seriously considered asian american studies before too, and I’m still wavering on the idea. Neither are odd, just relatively less popular.</p>
<p>I might end up doing Cognitive Science and I didn’t even know exactly what that was until I went on a major search spree a few months back.</p>
<p>Linguistics. Not really odd or obscure, but not terribly popular either. It seems like most people just don’t really know what it is.</p>
<p>Does philosophy count?</p>
<p>^Are you joking?</p>
<p>I’m a Cognitive Science major.</p>
<p>Well considering that 300 and some people applied to ucla as a philosophy transfer, I would say so. But it does seem to be a bit popular. </p>
<p>I figure that these non impacted obscure and odd majors have a better chance than others. </p>
<p>[Profile</a> of Admitted Transfer Students by Major, Fall 2010 - UCLA Undergraduate Admissions](<a href=“http://www.admissions.ucla.edu/prospect/Adm_tr/Tr_Prof10_mjr.htm]Profile”>http://www.admissions.ucla.edu/prospect/Adm_tr/Tr_Prof10_mjr.htm)</p>
<p>Actually, philosophy seems to be up there, in terms of numbers and such.</p>
<p>martin luther king has a degree in philosophy. :-)</p>
<p>My odd major was biotechnology but I changed it to something very common Business major :P</p>
<p>I was just asking :-P</p>
<p>Ethnomusicology</p>
<p>chemistry(uncommon where I go to).</p>
<p>American Literature and Culture</p>
<p>I was an animal science major, applied to transfer as bio, but only in order to get into microbiology. For some reason, people don’t like to study small stuff as much as big stuff.</p>