<p>Majors that cater to minority interests are generally very, very easy. Women's, Gender, African-American and Queer studies majors usually have extremely soft grade distributions in addition to having very fluffy subject matter.</p>
<p>kinesiology, golf management (what the hel l are u gonna do with this degree)??, dance ...</p>
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<p>Make a *****ton of money managing a golf course?</p>
<p>American Studies, Art History</p>
<p>ART History is not easy at all. Just imagine all the stuff they have to memorize daily.</p>
<p>How hard, or easy, is political science?</p>
<p>How hard, or easy, is political science?</p>
<p>I know someone who has a degree in political science and has been unemployed for 3 years. Just goes to show the endless opportunities a college education can provide for you. I think however, you should try posting this question in the other forum that deals with majors...someone can possibly help you with your question there.</p>
<p>Political Science is not easy but it's also not hard.</p>
<p>It's very interesting.</p>
<p>Art History
Gender Studies
Social Sciences
Media Studies
Visual Arts
Theatre and Dance (if you can perform)</p>
<p>A majors difficulty is relative to the person...</p>
<p>there are majors with more courses required than others. So if you only have to take 4 courses / semester compare to someone else who take 6, then it would be easier for you. For example some majors at my school doesn't even fulfill 120 credits to graduate, you need to add some 'non-sense' courses to make 120 credits. In that case, it would be like an easy A to take some gym classes for fun. That makes that major easier than say, aerospace engineering (at my school), which requires 124 credits to graduate.</p>
<p>I think Business Major/Accounting is the easiest.....come on, be honest, you should really beat yourself if you can't get at least a B+</p>
<p>Art history does involve a lot of memorization, but once you get the basic concepts down (like learning the name of things), it really just comes down to how much you notice about what you're looking at and the ability to look up information. As for memorizing stuff for slide IDs...that you can do in a cram session the day before an exam. Art history is a lot if you want to do it well and as a profession, but really easy if you want to coast.</p>
<p>Accounting is not easy to me.</p>
<p>"I think Business Major/Accounting is the easiest.....come on, be honest, you should really beat yourself if you can't get at least a B+"
You must be a humanities major. Accounting is pretty difficult... </p>
<p>There’s a reason why there’s a huge demand for accountants; not a lot of people major in it.</p>
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There’s a reason why there’s a huge demand for accountants; not a lot of people major in it.
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<p>...that a lot of people choose not to major in something does not mean it is particularly difficult – I am just pre-empting any implicit conclusion here. It also doesn't necessarily mean that there might be a huge demand for students of that major. There are relatively few film studies majors, but nobody is scrambling to get their bums of the street.</p>
<p>Someone here, I think, said that art history is not easy because it involves a lot of memorization. To be sure, its "memorizability" is exactly why it is easy. If I can study for an exam or quiz simply by memorizing remotely a couple hundred facts, I would regard that as easy. The hard stuff comes when students need not only to memorize a given set of facts, but also to manipulate that data in order to draw certain conclusions. This is never the case in art history, and is really only apparent in one, maybe two humanities disciplines. It is quite popular in the sciences: I learned the hard way that rote memorization is insufficient for, say, biology, and that true mastery of the material required internalizing and being able to manipulate the facts that you've studied.</p>
<p>Finance, Physics, and upper level Psychology courses tend to be difficult.</p>
<p>Did you debate in high school, nspeds?</p>
<p>Because you're a very solid debater from my observation.</p>
<p>You've laid a path of destruction here on College Confidential by annihilating your opponents.</p>
<p>^ Yeah his other posts have been mainly critiques of other posts. And I'm sure that this post would be followed by one as well. But it would be silly to reply...because his intention of making others fall weak to their word usually prevails.</p>
<p>i would say marketing...following by art history</p>