分享

The 15 college majors with the biggest payoffs

 bjvita 2012-08-31

The 15 college majors with the biggest payoffs

Headed back to school, and uncertain what to major in? It might help to check out a hefty new paperback tome, College Majors Handbook with Real Career Paths and Payoffs. The 546-page book is packed with detailed career information on 58 majors, including the kinds of jobs each major is likely to lead to; how closely related grads' work usually is to the subjects they studied; how much (or little) degree holders in each field report enjoying what they do; and how much they earn.

The four co-authors — led by Drexel University research professor Neeta P. Fogg and by Paul Harrington, director of Drexel's Center for Labor Markets and Policy — mined the data from mountains of Census Bureau statistics, U.S. Department of Labor studies, and a 2011 National Science Foundation survey of 170, 000 college grads.

Median pay for a recent college graduate with a full-time job in 2010, the researchers found, stood at $53, 976. But these 15 majors commanded substantially more:

1. Pre-med $100, 000

2. Computer systems engineering $85, 000

3. Pharmacy $84, 000

4. Chemical engineering $80, 000

5. Electrical and electronics engineering $75, 000

6. Mechanical engineering $75, 000

7. Aerospace and aeronautical engineering $74, 000

8. Computer science $73, 000

9. Industrial engineering $73, 000

10. Physics and astronomy $72, 200

11. Civil engineering $70, 000

12. Electrical and electronics engineering technology $65, 000

13. Economics $63, 300

14. Financial management $63, 000

15. Mechanical engineering technology $63, 000

Clearly, engineers are hot properties, but even the five non-engineering majors on the list require a strong mathematical bent. What if you're not inclined toward math and science? Luckily for liberal arts mavens, College Majors Handbook notes, "Salary is not the only form of payoff from a college education."

Consider: Despite relatively modest median pay of $44, 000, well below the roughly $54, 000 average for all 58 fields of study, English majors report job satisfaction that is on a par with that of people who make far more money. Likewise, recent grads who majored in history, although they earn $48, 000 on average — and often end up working in unrelated fields like sales and marketing — report higher-than-average satisfaction with their chosen path.

Moreover, even at the lower end of the salary scale, the authors point out, higher education leads to more earning power: "The average employed young person with a bachelor's degree earned 81% more in 2011 than his or counterpart with a high school diploma. The earnings premium of individuals with college degrees persists over their lifetime." Given the often jaw-dropping price tag on a sheepskin these days, that's good to know.

    本站是提供个人知识管理的网络存储空间,所有内容均由用户发布,不代表本站观点。请注意甄别内容中的联系方式、诱导购买等信息,谨防诈骗。如发现有害或侵权内容,请点击一键举报。
    转藏 分享 献花(0

    0条评论

    发表

    请遵守用户 评论公约

    类似文章 更多