<p>Hello, im a HS senior and I have my heart set on BU and im pretty sure I could get in. I also am pretty sure I want to go for Business although my math skills are shaky so I was leaning towards Management, and then I saw Organizational Behavior.</p>
<p>At first it seemed too good to be true, it was a a Business major with a concentration that I was extremely interested in that I think I would enjoy. But then I started to think...</p>
<p>Is Organizational Behavior a "real" major?</p>
<p>And when I say that, of course I know that it is a real major, but I mean is it a major that could actually get me somewhere in the world. It is going to put me in a Toby Flenderson from The Office job or an actual high paying, successful job haha.</p>
<p>They also have "Marketing and "Law" concentrations which are also something I could sink my teeth into, would that be a better choice?
Would there be more job avaliability in those fields?</p>
<p>The math is definitely not difficult at all. Don’t fool yourself into thinking that it is. You’ll have a calculator for every calculation. The difficult part comes from the rules and procedures that you have to follow to get through those calculations.</p>
<p>In just the majors I listed or all majors? Because Math is by far my WORST subject thats why I was leaning towards those less math-oriented majors.</p>
<p>My question was is Organizational Behavior a concentration that I could make substantial money in, in the future and if not which of the other concentrations that I mentioned would be better for me to focus on</p>
<p>I don’t know much about organizational behavior, but I would say that you should be able to find some sort of job (perhaps work with HR? I’m not sure but it sounds like psychology with a bunch of intro business courses). In terms of salary, maybe look up some jobs that people with that major qualify for, and then you can determine it from there. Your career services should be able to help you with that too.</p>
<p>For math, I would say most majors. Most business schools mandate their students to take either calculus 1 or applied calculus, and also intro to statistics. I would say statistics is the harder one of the two, but everyone is different. It’s only two courses, and they’re the lowest levels of calculus and statistics. It might seem hard at first, but if you ever plan to go to graduate school, you’ll need those anyway. Especially psychology or marketing.</p>
<p>With that said, getting through those two courses will be the most difficult courses you’ll have in math, since you don’t look like you’ll be majoring in either finance or economics. Accounting seriously doesn’t go any higher than +, -, x, and divide. Finance uses a little but of statistics but depending on your school, you might have excel do it for you. </p>
<p>It all sounds a lot more difficult than it is.</p>