Stereotyping by College Major

<p>gaming the system to score a high GPA for med school.</p>

<p>Food science</p>

<p>some fat kid who wants to create the tastiest candy</p>

<p>Electrical Engineering</p>

<p>Arrogant masochist.</p>

<p>Architecture.</p>

<p>^A kid who likes art and math simultaneously.</p>

<p>a girl majoring in computer science</p>

<p>^^
Nerd girl.</p>

<p>Turfgrass major.</p>

<p>Someone who was told that they fail at biology/agroforestry and aspires to play golf and football but didn’t make the A-team.</p>

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<p>International Relations</p>

<p>Wildlife Biology</p>

<p>Broke hippie in Costa Rica</p>

<p>Electrical engineering major</p>

<p>Overachieving Asian/Autistic White kid. </p>

<p>David Beckham studies.</p>

<p>^lol, crazy obsessed fangirl</p>

<p>biochem + creative writing</p>

<p>pretty cool person, but jobless if stops biochem at bachelor’s level. Um, technical writer?</p>

<p>Dietetics?</p>

<p>Female who has had a eating disorder in their past</p>

<p>International Relations</p>

<p>A very confident individual who has always excelled academically and possesses great leadership qualities, most likely attended a prestigious east coast school during their undergrad. Probably plasters photos of their trips studying abroad in strange countries on Facebook.</p>

<p>Aerospace engineering</p>

<p>Very smart, but especially loves the prestige of saying they’re an aerospace engineer. Probably spent their childhood staring at the sky, dreaming about what’s out there.</p>

<p>Advertising.</p>

<p>Pushy people-person</p>

<p>Electrical engineering (again)</p>

<p>Very intelligent but socially outcast male.</p>

<p>Biochem and Linguistics double major.</p>

<p>Has a split personality, but knows how to talk smooth. </p>

<p>Biology (Pre-Med Track)</p>

<p>“hahahha you didnt get into the business school at rutgers this is why you are doing econ!”</p>

<p>Economics major.</p>

<p>Wears a Friedrich Hayek t-shirt and is fond of saying “The Economic Consequences of the Peace was a much better book than The General Theory.” Often spends fifteen bucks on 110-page books printed decades ago.</p>

<p>Public administration.</p>