<p>I'm going to Michigan LSA next year.</p>
<p>I want to be able to party on weekdays.</p>
<p>Which concentrations would you recommend?</p>
<p>I'm going to Michigan LSA next year.</p>
<p>I want to be able to party on weekdays.</p>
<p>Which concentrations would you recommend?</p>
<p>wow...picking your degree on the basis of being able to party on weekdays, nice. I can't help you there. =P</p>
<p>Lol okay. I almost picked MSU, but my parents pressured me...</p>
<p>be a psych major.</p>
<p>Partying on the weekdays isn't a very smart route. Doubt you'll find many kids to do it with you, and the ones who do will probably end up in pretty poor shape academically.</p>
<p>If you want to party every day of the week, you can definitely do it at MSU.</p>
<p>God, there is so, so much more to do at this University than party. I'm not just talking about the many ways to be a grind who stays in to study. There's loads to do here...don't just party, you'll miss what makes U-M great.</p>
<p>Haha don't hate. =P</p>
<p>K so you're saying that there aren't any majors that stand out as party majors? </p>
<p>What about something random and small like Mediterranean Civilizations or something. Would that be an easier concentration?</p>
<p>Oh okay psych. Thanks for the suggestion. Psych is a pretty big major at UM though isn't it?</p>
<p>I was also looking at Organizational Studies lol. What do you think of that concentration?</p>
<p>You know, I don't think org studies is necessarily a blow-off major. It started off as an Individualized Concentration, but so many people were carving it out for themselves that they made it a formal major. I think you'll find a lot of business-oriented types taking that; people who just missed getting into Ross, or wanted something more humanistic than econ but more business-oriented than Pysch. </p>
<p>I would recommend getting here, exploring some departments, and deciding later. Ultimately you want to choose something you find interesting enough so you don't mind the work you will inevitably have to do to not fail out. Because even if you do care more about the social side of things, you're going to have to do SOME work in ANY major you pick. If you can live with low grades, then what does it matter which department you get those low grades from? Better to make it something that actually captures your interest.</p>
<p>Your defensive tone tells me that org studies is indeed a blow-off major.</p>
<p>hahahaha lol. just pick any major thats not heavily science or math related, and you can party as much as you want... as long as you can bs your way through the classes. Though I don't think you'll "succeed" if you continuously party throughout the weekdays, you can definitely party once in a while. Or if your one of those super geniuses that don't need to study, and can read a book once and remember every single word, than maybe you can party every day.</p>
<p>though i really suggest you follow a major that you enjoy, because whatever you do will pave the way to all your future careers.</p>
<p>lol this thread cracks me up..</p>
<p>How about Underwater Fire Extinguishing? I hear the subject matter pretty much takes care of itself, leaving you with a great deal of time to party during weekdays!</p>
<p>Take a Math and Econ double major. Fail your first term, tell your parents it's too hard, transfer to MSU.</p>
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I want to be able to party on weekdays.
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<p>Very ambitious; I'm impressed. I don't think it's going to be easy though. I would recommend transferring over to the college of engineering. I heard chemical engineering is easy.</p>
<p>haha just so you know, org studies is one of the most selective majors offered here. theres a separate application process for it. i totally agree with hoedown, theres so much more to do on campus than getting **** drunk. youll be missing out for sure.</p>
<p>cc apparently thinks that p-i-s-s is a bad word. lol woops.</p>
<p>Oh. But don't you have to apply separately to every concentration?</p>
<p>I think a good strategy would be to find concentrations for which there are advanced tracks offered, like linguistics, and then take the normal track. What do you think?</p>
<p>I think you picked possibly the worst forum on the internet to ask this question lol</p>