No F....Freakin Idea What I Want to Do

<p>Had to censor myself there....</p>

<p>I have noooo idea what I want to major in in college. NO IDEA. I'm a sophomore in HS. Is that bad?</p>

<p>no. i changed my major 2 weeks before college started, and if i transfer i'll be changing again but along the same career path this time. chill & enjoy HS</p>

<p>dont worry about that until at least your senior year in high school. many college freshman start undecided, and i've heard that half of all college students change their major at least once during college.</p>

<p>take a wide variety of courses and find out what you like the best.</p>

<p>The important thing is for you to take a step back half way through college and really ask yourself: do you really like what your doing and is this the place you want to be studying at?</p>

<p>Don't worry arctic_monkey, you'll figure it out. Just do what you want (I almost said just follow your heart...how cheesy!) :D.</p>

<p>dude....don't worry I am going through the same thing, but I suggest you truly truly look deep inside yourself and you will know..I suggest you go on a vacation or a trip or something by yourself and just keep thinking about it and you will just know...trust me, even though I have not made a decision yet either. I am torn between business and psychology/pre-med/med-school. I want to make money and be powerful, but then again I really want to help people and when you look at guys like Dr. Paul Farmer and Dr. Jim Kim, you just realize your calling.</p>

<p>I know people say you don't need to know, and they're right, don't stress but you should start developing an idea of a very general area: are you math/science or artsy? Depending on your answer you should gear your EC's and such to show you have a "passion" when you apply for college. For example, going to a prestigious summer research program like RSI would not hold as much weight if you applied to a school of business. Once you get into a school though, you can always switch majors with varying degrees of feasibility depending on the college.</p>