teo123 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:39 am
My father thinks that too many people go study STEM fields which they aren't talented in, which he calls "STEM Craze". He thinks that this "
STEM degrees guarantee a successful career, while humanity degrees don't." is a myth. He tells me that all of his classmates in his history and archeology class had a succesful career.
I believe this is what the kids these days refer to as "copium."
It's not necessarily that STEM guarantees a career and humanities don't, it's more that STEM is much more likely to land you a lucrative job. All of my classmates in engineering, soon after graduating, were landing jobs that were salaried at $50k-$75k a year (and that's just to start!). Statistically, STEM majors almost always make more. The joke where the person who studied theater is working at Starbucks exists for a reason.
But archaeology and history can be viable career paths in a country where higher education is limited. Folks with History degrees can easily find work as teachers/professors, as can archaeologists in a country where there is likely less archaeological advancement compared to other places. Interesting how your father has cherry-picked these two degrees over many others.
A humanities degree in Croatia may be worth more there since higher education isn't as common and thus more valuable, but again, as higher education keeps spreading and more people go into liberal arts, that will diminish. But with STEM, those things you'll always need in abundance, including all types of engineers (civil, mechanical, electrical), chemists, physicists, biologists (both for practical and R&D purposes), and especially computer scientists, in our increasingly technological world. People are much more likely to gravitate towards degrees they find easy and fun than STEM, and often after the first semester people swap from STEM to something else since the former ends up being too hard.
If there were a surplus of STEM your father would have a point, but we aren't anywhere close to that yet, especially not in Croatia. "Going into fields they aren't talented in" is sort of the point, you go to college to get the basics under your belt.