<p>or are they both degrees for dumb people that can't cut it in college? thanks! also if u happen to kno... does it make u good money once ure in the job market? thanks</p>
<p>bumppppppppppppp</p>
<p>Your degree does not matter that much. If you take courses that will help you in your job, you can include that in your resume… it will give interviewers a prompt so they ask you about specific coursework. However, a college wouldn’t offer a major if they thought it would be a “degree for dumb people.” </p>
<p>As for it making you good money… reality check. Your major doesn’t make you anything. If you screw around, scrape by with barely passing marks and learn nothing, you could graduate from Harvard and have no shot at getting a job. What makes you money is your drive. What kind of work experience do you have? What coursework have you done? How is your prior experience relevant to your present worth and future potential?</p>
<p>You can get a job in just about any industry with just about any major (obviously some exceptions) as long as you demonstrate interest and prove that your experience is useful. To use myself as an example, I am a political theory concentration in a political science major; I have had a job of some sort since I was 14 years old, but they have been either summer camp/lifeguarding jobs or in restaurants (I spent every college summer waiting tables). And somehow, I am going to be working as a consultant in a very quantitative business in a few months. How is that possible? Because I proved that restaurant experience is generally valuable life experience; that within political science are some extremely quantitative courses; and that extra curricular experience has been worthwhile and has given me leadership skills that could be utilized.</p>
<p>The point is that your major doesn’t determine your future. You do. Don’t look for a major that is your ticket to success because, frankly, arbitrage kicks in every time – i.e. those majors don’t exist.</p>