I was going to address the nursing issue, but since you started it, I'll just add to it. I went into nursing feeling the same way your husband does: that I'd always have a job. It helped that I liked caring for patients.My husband is a nurse and feels secure that he will always have a job. Yes, there are always layoffs and the field isn't booming like in the glory days of 10- 15 years ago when there were recruitment bonuses and huge sign up bonuses, etc. But he feels that he can always find a job somewhere. It doesn't pay great, but it pays decent.
He just got his Masters in Nursing Informatics which is a very specialized field that is bound to become more necessary in the coming years.
Honestly, neither of my daughters are strong math and science students. They both majored/will major in liberal arts. The oldest double majored in English and Spanish, the youngest is majoring in Psychology.
What helps students like these find jobs (in my opinion only, of course!!)
1. Personality and Charm
I don't mean phony Eddie Haskell charm. I mean being able to shake someone's hand, make full eye contact, have a pleasant conversation and maintain decorum in a business setting. Knowing what is appropriate to wear, to say and to be able to act professionally. Having a great sense of humor and being able to bake specialty cupcakes for her coworkers has been a bonus for my daughter
2. Extra Skills
Being able to speak a foreign language, knowing sign language, having experience in computer or social media when most of the people in your office don't know what Twitter is or how to use it. If you are competing for jobs outside the high wage math and science careers, much of what you will be doing anyone could do. Learn what you can along the way so when someone in your office needs to find a person with specific skills, you'll be that person.
3. Networking
Here's where those small private liberal arts schools come in handy. Both schools my daughters attend/ed have great placement departments but even better they have alumni networks and it's not uncommon for new grads to go to work for alums in various areas of the country. Keep that network going!! Contribute to Annual Funds, keep your name in front of the school after you graduate, call on alums in fields you'd like to work for and see what they recommend.
4. Writing
Being able to express yourself well in written form is a skill everyone should have, in my opinion. Not tweets, not text messaging or email writing, but the real deal. Being able to write a report, an article for the staff newsletter, etc. is something every student should have in his/her back pocket.
That's how I look at it for my dd and her Theatre Major. She is never going to go to Broadway (she wouldn't be happy with my saying that since you never can tell!!). But she will be well rounded due to the Core requirements at her school. She will be fairly well traveled. She will be poised and able to converse intelligently.Honestly, neither of my daughters are strong math and science students. They both majored/will major in liberal arts. The oldest double majored in English and Spanish, the youngest is majoring in Psychology.
What helps students like these find jobs (in my opinion only, of course!!)
1. Personality and Charm
I don't mean phony Eddie Haskell charm. I mean being able to shake someone's hand, make full eye contact, have a pleasant conversation and maintain decorum in a business setting. Knowing what is appropriate to wear, to say and to be able to act professionally. Having a great sense of humor and being able to bake specialty cupcakes for her coworkers has been a bonus for my daughter
2. Extra Skills
Being able to speak a foreign language, knowing sign language, having experience in computer or social media when most of the people in your office don't know what Twitter is or how to use it. If you are competing for jobs outside the high wage math and science careers, much of what you will be doing anyone could do. Learn what you can along the way so when someone in your office needs to find a person with specific skills, you'll be that person.
3. Networking
Here's where those small private liberal arts schools come in handy. Both schools my daughters attend/ed have great placement departments but even better they have alumni networks and it's not uncommon for new grads to go to work for alums in various areas of the country. Keep that network going!! Contribute to Annual Funds, keep your name in front of the school after you graduate, call on alums in fields you'd like to work for and see what they recommend.
4. Writing
Being able to express yourself well in written form is a skill everyone should have, in my opinion. Not tweets, not text messaging or email writing, but the real deal. Being able to write a report, an article for the staff newsletter, etc. is something every student should have in his/her back pocket.
Neither of my girls will work in careers based solely on their major, I don't think. My older daughter worked in the Admissions Department of her college for three years, then found a job with a company that focuses on providing specialty services to colleges.
This is a toughy. What I mean by that is, you want to encourage your kids to do something they will love but also be able to earn a good living from. My oldest son doesn't even have his bachelors degree yet (he is working on it online) but already makes over 6 figures in the tech field. He is so talented at what he does no one cares about the degree, he works for a MAJOR company. My daughter was so strong in HS across the board. It was hard for her to decide on a major. Our dr actually talked her out of being a biology major unless she wants to go to med school and be a dr. Now she has her sights set on law school and is double majoring in political science and international affairs. She really loves these majors and is carrying a 4.0. I'm hoping between both majors and law school she will be offered some interesting opportunities that also pay well. She got to skip almost 2 years of college due to IB credits, so that is a help financially.
Certainly not a Theatre major, English Lit minor!!!! Oh well.
My daughter was so strong in HS across the board. It was hard for her to decide on a major. Our dr actually talked her out of being a biology major unless she wants to go to med school and be a dr.
Or a double major in Creative Writing/Film Studies![]()
Your doctor is wrong. Research biology is actually a very solid career field; I work somewhere that employs nearly 300 of them, and we are always looking for good people. We hire techs who have Bachelor's and Master's, and lots of postdocs as well. Pharma and big agriculture hire even more of them, and pay quite well.