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/sci/ - Science & Math


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9771199 No.9771199 [Reply] [Original]

which stem degrees are in high demand

>> No.9771223

The ones that appear the most on the job market.

>> No.9771237
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9771237

Whatever STEM degree will all you to contribute the most to curing aging.

>> No.9771271

>>9771199
according to /sci/ don't get any engineering degrees they are all completely oversaturated and nobody in the past 10 years has ever gotten a job in engineering

you should do CS as employers will literally bidding on you and you will have 100 job offers without apply before even graduating from community college

>> No.9771285
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9771285

I feel like since I can learn good and am a creative lad I might as well get more money for learning my college info. I heard Stem was all about this.

>> No.9771286
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9771286

>>9771199
The only degree that's really in demand right now is nursing.

>> No.9771296

yeah I have heard there is a demand for the computer science as well

>> No.9771299

I aint no queer nurse I aint gonna touch no ball sacks

>> No.9771327

>>9771199
Architectural/Structural Engineering, almost always. There is never a time when buildings are out of demand.

>> No.9771342

>>9771199
I'll probably get mocked for saying this, but biology, and more specifically, either microbiology or an applied ecology field. Microbiology is going to experience intense growth due to technologies like gene editing and eDNA. The applied ecology field is a practical choice because there are always jobs for field technicians, and if you pursue graduate studies, jobs for folks who conduct basic research and translate it into management strategies.

>> No.9771354

>>9771342
that stuff is still a long time away.

>> No.9771360

>>9771354
What is? Jobs concerning gene editing and eDNA or jobs in an applied ecology field? You're wrong on both counts.

>> No.9771382

>>9771199
Skills are in demand, not degrees. The fanciest degree won't buy you shit if you're a sperg with no communications kills, or no record of proven capability outside of the uni environment.

>> No.9771472

>>9771199
Computer Science and Applied Mathematics (mostly statistics).

>> No.9771511

>>9771382
Nailed it

>> No.9771524

>>9771199

there is a big fuss about anything photonics related, for example optical engineering.

>> No.9771746

>>9771524
can you eloborate? I haven't heard much of it compared to things like big data, AI, and brain-machine interfaces.

>> No.9771757

>>9771199
No one who needs to google what is in high demand to choose a degree will ever be successful. Let's say you find what you want and enroll in it. There you'll meet people who have been passionate about the subject since they were a fetus and will leave you behind by the time your first semester ends. They'll get all the internships, their professors will be hooking them up and not you, all awards your university gives will go to them, etc.

You are a fake. Go get a business degree.

>> No.9771768

EE and ME will give you a high chance of being either unemployed or underemployed.

>> No.9771831

>>9771199
CS, IE, EE (if you focus in renovable energy)

>>9771757
False, I picked my major because of the money and i'm top of my class.

>> No.9771837

>>9771831
>i'm top of my class.
Poodunk state university does not count bucko

>> No.9771844

>>9771837
I'm not american, my classes are harder.

>> No.9771848

>>9771844

not all americans go to community college. some of us go to one of the many american universities that are ranked in the world's top 100.

>> No.9771850

>>9771844
Poodunk regional university does not count either, bucko.

>> No.9771853

>>9771844

american universities provide the best education.

foreigners on here are so fucking stupid lol

>> No.9771855

>>9771848
>>9771850
At undergraduate level american degrees are really easy.

>> No.9771859

>>9771327
This is what I used to think before I entered the job market.

>>9771199
Chances are that everyone else is asking the same question you are, so no matter what you choose then it will end up becoming saturated by the time you graduate. That's what happened to me.

>> No.9771861

>>9771855
If it is so easy, considering that America has the most startups, patents per year, innovations per year, highest salaries for entrepreneurs and businesses, lower taxes, etc., why would you not get a degree in the US and with less effort than you have to put in right now, reap higher benefits?

>inb4 I want to make less money

>> No.9771865

>>9771855
t. either American larper or salty europoor

Have fun passing your classes with a 40% wow very difficult

>> No.9771867

what do you guys think of geology?

>> No.9771871
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9771871

>>9771844
>>9771855
>it's yet another edition of insecure euros post about how their education is vaguely superior

>> No.9771877

>>9771865
>>9771861
>why would you not get a degree in the US and with less effort than you have to put in right now, reap higher benefits?
I got a scholarship to do a master's degree in the United States. At graduate level American universities are top level (at least in STEM), because of the money they have. But at undergraduate level the education is quite poor. I can't believe american students get in debt to pay for that. I can post my undergraduate programs degree if you want to, and we can compare the classes.

>> No.9771881

>>9771877

American universities are not monolithic. They range in difficulty and given that you sound like a complete fucking retard, I doubt you got into any good university.

>> No.9771899

>>9771867
it rocks

>> No.9771911

>>9771881
ive seen MITs physics and math tests and they were waaaay easier

>> No.9771978

compter science and higher maths including physics is what I heard required more creativity

>> No.9771986

Coming from my pa who is phd in applied mathamatics and is trained in some other shit and makes fat stacks. He says that a degree alone is not enough to be useful and the company has turned away many hot shot degree fellers because they were not productive enough. says their is a seperate intelligence needed to being a useful employee.