<p>I was planning on majoring in Astronomy, until I found out there are practically no job opportunities unless you have a PhD in it. I am also interested in Physics though; what majors associated with physics have the most job opportunities? ...would greatly appreciate like a list or somethin...</p>
<p>There's actually a good resource on this on Princeton Review's site...if you go to Majors in their college section, they'll tell you what kinds of jobs you can get, and what degree you need.</p>
<p>You could get a job at an investment bank/hedge fund/private equity etc., they will value your number-crunching and analytical prowess.</p>
<p>If it's from a prestigious school anyway!</p>
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what majors associated with physics have the most job opportunities?
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<p>That's easy: it's the engineering majors. Mechanical Engineering and Electrical Engineering are basically just "Super-Applied Physics".</p>
<p>@ Stone_cutter</p>
<p>You can always become a secondary physics teacher. Science teachers are in high demand. I would also check out the fact sheet below:</p>