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Old 09-22-2014, 05:43 PM
 
7,005 posts, read 12,501,365 times
Reputation: 5480

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I think they changed their methodology because there are major changes from last year's list. Economics, biology, and theater arts/drama are no longer in the top 10. One problem that I have is that they asked if the person felt underpaid. I don't think that's really relevant unless you're comparing salary to the cost of the degree to calculate return on investment. You either need a degree or you don't for the position you have. Feeling underpaid is subjective. They did also ask if the person is working part-time but wants to work full-time and if they're using their education/training.

However, I truly do believe that criminal justice majors have a high underemployment rate. People like to argue with me on this, but criminal justice majors tend to be underemployed because they take jobs that don't require a bachelor's degree: police, corrections, security, etc. Honestly, they don't qualify for much else. Even among the 100 largest cities and 100 largest police departments (these lists are different), only 4-16% of them require a bachelor's degree. Overall, only 1% of police departments require a bachelor's degree. These numbers don't include federal law enforcement agencies; but, even then, most of them do not require a criminal justice degree. In some cases, having a criminal justice degree can hurt your chances of getting a job in a federal law enforcement agency.

Last year, business management/administration was #1 and criminal justice and theater arts/drama were #2.

Most Underemployed Majors
Criminal Justice
Business Management & Administration
Health Care Administration
General Studies
Sociology
English Language & Literature
Graphic Design
Liberal Arts
Education
Psychology

Least Underemployed Majors
Civil & Environmental Engineering
Aerospace Engineering
Computer Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Law (??? this list is supposed to be undergraduate majors only)
Physics
Mechanical Engineering
Electrical Engineering
Geology
Mathematics

The college majors most and least likely to lead to underemployment - The Washington Post
PayScale | Most Underemployed Majors
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Old 09-22-2014, 05:49 PM
 
13,008 posts, read 18,954,017 times
Reputation: 9252
Doesn't surprise me. Seems like everyone is going into that major.
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