total jobs On EmploymentCrossing

1,470,598

new jobs this week On EmploymentCrossing

632

Employment News

College students are often asked what they are majoring in. It is one decision that could be the difference between getting a job and not getting one and getting it easily or having to struggle really hard to get one.

Education experts say that an unwisely chosen major could mean a waste of time. It does make sense to choose a major that could help you get a job and help clear the student debt as soon as possible. It would do well to remember that the country is still not out of the woods and that the job market continues to stutter and that your student loan, however miniscule, is a contributing factor to the upwards of $1 trillion loan debt in America.

Every year job analysts and recruiters compile a list of which majors have the best job prospects. They decry students who opt for such unconventional majors as anthropology, zoology and medieval history. They say that architecture and clinical psychology majors are likely to remain unemployed, whilst petroleum engineering majors could rake in as much as $178,000.

Is it really all that vital, that choosing a wrong major could break your career and choosing the right one could make it? This is what hiring managers say:

They believe that the major listed on the job-posting ad is more relevant if it is an entry level job and would definitely be on the employers top criteria’s for eligibility. A few years down the line it won’t make much of a difference as your abilities are more or less known and progression will be based more on your proven credentials rather than your academic ones.

However, some hiring managers say that more than your major it is more important where you have studied and what is your GPA.  Elle Kaplan, CEO of Lexion Capital Management said, “If you go to a great school, have risen to leadership positions in your extracurricular activities and have achieved a very high GPA, that matters more to me than the particular major you chose.”

Jeanine Hamilton, founder and president of Hire Partnership, a full-service staffing and workforce solutions firm based in Boston said that the skills learnt were more important than the major. If the major is unconventional but if it has taught the candidate skills that would help him with the job, which was more important than the major itself.

Majors are important but not the be-all and end-all of all career paths open before a candidate. Without doubt a candidate looking for an engineering job would be favorites to land one if he had a major in engineering. Another major-specific job would be computer science-based positions such as programming. But even if jobs are relatively easier to get in major-specific careers, they limit options in other fields.

Just having a major is no guarantee of a job. It is just one more piece of information on your resume. The first thing to do is to accept that you cannot change the weapons in your armory and have got to get a job with whatever major you have, irrespective of  whether hiring managers think it is relevant or not.

First thing to do is to get yourself an in-person interview and tell them that the major that you have has taught you skills that would help you at the workplace. Talk about your work experiences or internships, your extracurricular activities, your volunteer work, your GPA, your skills and your competence.

If they stand convinced, your major will hardly make a difference.

Career Connect  (From our other career blogs):

Testimonial of the Week

By using Employment Crossing, I was able to find a job that I was qualified for and a place that I wanted to work at.
  • Madison Currin Greenville, NC
Sign Up now

Only TravelingCrossing consolidates every job it can find in the domain and puts all of the job listings it locates in one place.

  • We have more jobs than any other job board.
  • We list jobs you will not find elsewhere that are hidden in small regional publications and employer websites
  • We collect jobs from more than 4,429,376 websites and post them on our site.
  • We are private, and therefore far fewer people are applying for the jobs on our site than are applying for those on public job boards.
What I liked about the service is that it had such a comprehensive collection of jobs! I was using a number of sites previously and this took up so much time, but in joining EmploymentCrossing, I was able to stop going from site to site and was able to find everything I needed on EmploymentCrossing.
John Elstner - Baltimore, MD
  • All we do is research jobs.
  • Our team of researchers, programmers, and analysts find you jobs from over 1,000 career pages and other sources
  • Our members get more interviews and jobs than people who use "public job boards"
Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss it, you will land among the stars.
TravelingCrossing - #1 Job Aggregation and Private Job-Opening Research Service — The Most Quality Jobs Anywhere
TravelingCrossing is the first job consolidation service in the employment industry to seek to include every job that exists in the world.
Copyright © 2025 TravelingCrossing - All rights reserved. 21