<p>The article you mention confirms the riskiness involved in pursuing a degree in liberal arts. Ironically, at Ivies and many top schools, they pride themselves on their rigorous liberal arts education and theoretical, not practical, aspects of their courses.</p>
<p>One thing that sets apart Princeton, or other Ivies, away from liberal arts majors at other universities is that even humanities majors at Ivies have access to recruiting from i-banks and consulting firms. Indeed, there are plenty of people from such schools, with majors in English or Political Science, who successfully attain Investment Banking Analyst jobs post graduation.</p>
<p>However, this is very risky, as a vast majority of employers outside of high finance don’t particularly care about a person’s academic pedigree, but much more so on his/her skill-set, experience, or choice of college major. As a result, many students at Princeton or other Ivies who go on to major in humanities and strike out on high finance/ consulting jobs, they will likely to struggle a great deal in the job market. And, getting high finance or top consulting jobs are incredibly competitive, and just because you attend Princeton/ Harvard/ Wharton, there is no guarantee that you will score such jobs. </p>
<p>Truth be told, someone who majors in accounting or engineering at a second tier college will have a much higher success rate of attaining a salaried job with decent career upshot, as opposed to a humanities/ liberal arts students at Harvard or Princeton. (On the other hand, if you are one of those lucky folks and score an IBD or top consulting job with a degree in Political Science, more power to you)</p>
<p>Now, considering the fact that a significant portion of student body at schools such as Yale or Princeton pursue humanities major (such as Political Science, history, or English), are they really making prudent choices overall? These kids are, no doubt, very driven and talented academically. Knowing their level of talent and intelligence, I am honestly surprised that they’re not considering pursuing ‘marketable’ majors, such as accounting, sciences, engineering, or statistics.</p>