Which major should I choose for graduate school?

<p>I agree with polarscribe - talk to people who know /you/, and who know /your/ specific situation. Unless I missed it, you did not tell us why you cannot take a few gap years between graduation and graduate school. Many people find after graduation that their interests and opportunities change, and they never need to return to graduate school anyway to change fields or move up in their profession.</p>

<p>If you don’t like dealing with people’s problems, you probably won’t like HR. The HR manager is the one who everyone goes to when they have problems with their own managers, or other employees. We handle ethics complaints, harassment, etc. I personally love helping people when I can, and I am upset when I am unable to help them. But it is a rewarding job. </p>

<p>Talk to your professors and gain some more volunteer and internship experience. Maybe even get a part-time job off campus in an office setting or some other place that will allow you to get an idea of what different types of jobs are like. You have too many very different ideas when all you really need is to explore and find your focus. It may seem like whatever you major in now will be your career - but it is now very common for people to change careers several times in one’s life (which does not always require going back to school), so you are NOT trapped in sociology after graduation, even if you don’t go to graduate school.</p>