The top 10 college majors American students regret the most

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The top 10 college majors American students regret the most
Jessica dikkler | @jdikkler
Published 8:34 AM ET Thu, 5 Dec 2019Updated 9:27 AM ET Thu, 5 Dec 2019CNBC.com
  • Completing college is almost always worth it — bachelor's degree holders earn 84% more than those with just a high school diploma.
  • However, not all majors are created equal, according to a recent ZipRecruiter survey.
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College is a significant investment that comes with the hope of a better, richer life. It doesn't always work out that way.

Some experts say the value of a bachelor's degree is fading. Starting salaries for new college graduates have grown less than 1%over the past two years, remaining at around $50,000.

Worse yet: A decade after leaving school, more than 1 in 5 graduates are working in a job that doesn't even require a degree.


However, obtaining a diploma is almost always worth it in the long run, according to "The College Payoff," a report from the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce.

Bachelor's degree holders generally earn 84% more than those with just a high school diploma, the report said — and the higher the level of educational attainment, the larger the payoff.

When broken down by areas of study, however, the difference is striking. Students who pursue a major specifically in science, technology, engineering and math — collectively known as STEM disciplines — are projected to earn the most overall.

In addition to STEM, health and business majors are among the highest paying, leading to average annual wages that are higher at entry level and significantly greater over the course of a career compared to liberal arts and humanities majors, the Georgetown Center found.

All in, the top-paying college majors earn $3.4 million more than the lowest-paying majors over a lifetime.

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Of course, income isn't the only consideration. After adding in satisfaction, stress level and job opportunities, among other factors, jobs marketplace ZipRecruiter found that the majors college students most regretted choosing spanned the arts and sciences.

English, communications, biological sciences and law all made the list, according to ZipRecruiter's survey of more than 5,000 college graduates who were looking for a job.

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"This generation, more than any other that came before it, is looking for work with purpose and meaning," said ZipRecruiter CEO Ian Siegel.

"They are more aware of what their peers are doing" he added, and "it creates a little bit of the 'keeping up with the Joneses' effect."

On the upside, students who focused on computer science, business, engineering and health administration felt very good about their choices, ZipRecruiter found.

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threattonature

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ex think she gone get into law school hovering around a 2.0 gpa :mjlol: i hope Great Lakes rape that hoe:yeshrug:
shyt I have a friend that is saying she's going to law school. She said she was going to just wing the LSAT when I told her she needs to study her ass off for it. She thinks her resume will be enough to overcome a low score. She works a dead end job and has only had that one job. Took the LSAT and bombed it and then got rejected from every law school she replied too lol.
 

xXMASHERXx

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I think the amount of people surveyed is way to low. I also think they should have surveyed people with those degrees who are employed. I'm curious as to what were some of the expectations people had when they decided to persue these degrees. I know when I got mine I accepted that just because I had it that I wasn't guaranteed anything.
 

Cadillac

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I think the amount of people surveyed is way to low. I also think they should have surveyed people with those degrees who are employed. I'm curious as to what were some of the expectations people had when they decided to persue these degrees. I know when I got mine I accepted that just because I had it that I wasn't guaranteed anything.
What I was going to say

This should have been employed people. Not unemployed ones

At the least a mixxed bag of them would do
 
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