What would you do in this situation?

<p>i suck at making definite decisions:(</p>

<p>and this is about a college major. i want to persue Physical Therapy but thats a master and possibly a doc degree. I need a major anyways while i do my pre reqs for physical therapy and i chose logistics/operation management. it was extremely hard to choose one thing! but i have to:(</p>

<p>i took a whole bunch of tests at my school career center. i took the myers brigg personality test online several times and always come ENFP. i took the official Myers brig at my school and same thing. i was hoping these tests would narrow down my career choice and even point me to the one that i would be successful at. its almost pathetic but i'm sure you guys faced this dilemma of having to choose before.</p>

<p>anyways i'm rambling, but i had an appointment with a councilor and he pretty much said i was being irrational and a business degree had nothing to do with the medical field so why was i perusing it. also my test showed interest in the sciences, but it wasn't high enough while my enterprising interest was high.</p>

<p>i was planing to take the prerequisites for the physical therapy and get a logistics degree, but i also want to teach. so i wanted to add a post secondary certificate to the logistics degree so i can teach business at some high school somewhere. its alot and it might set me back on graduation.</p>

<p>should just give up on physical therapy? i could always come back and do the prerequisite later and go to grad school i suppose.</p>

<p>so what do you think. tell me what you would do honestly/</p>

<p>i need to learn to focus! focus and prioritize.:(</p>

<p>Physical therapy is the only improper noun in that post that you capitalized. So whatever gets you there the quickest is the best route!</p>

<p>You really don’t sound like a business-type to me. I’m just pointing out that this is the business major forum and part of majoring in business is that you should be pretty sure you want to work in business and business majors are, by nature, usually much more sure of what they are studying than the typical college student.</p>

<p>You need to do a pro’s and cons list and choose the route with the least cons (in your book). </p>

<p>At the top of the page list each combination of schooling. Draw a horizontal line under each combination and a vertical line down from the middle of each horizontal line. The left side is cons, the right is pros. Everything that is negative goes under cons. everything from difficulty, time loss, different colleges that may not have comparable core requirements, to not enough women to men, or more important not enough job prospects. Do the same for pro’s</p>