How do I know that the major I picked is the right one for me?
#career-development
2 answers
Ken’s Answer
Congratulations on being interested in finding the right career to follow.. It takes a special person to enter into a specific career field and meet the demands which that career area presents. The first step is to get to know yourself to see if you share the personality traits which make one successful in that area. The next step is doing networking to meet and talk to and possibly shadow people doing what you might think that you want to do to see if this is something that you really want to do, as a career area could look much different on the inside than it looks from the outside. When I was doing college recruiting, I encountered too many students, who skipped these important steps, and ended up in a career/job for which they were ill suited.
Ken recommends the following next steps:
Gerard’s Answer
Keygan, The short answer is "You don't"! One study states that within 10 years of graduation 70% of college graduates are working in areas other than their major.
Unless you have a lifelong passion that you want to pursue, I would say that you apply yourself to college as an overall learning experience. Find a major that interests you, but don't worry about having to "be that major" the rest of your life. The most valuable part of college is not necessarily the academic knowledge that you gleen in classes, but rather the self-knowledge, understanding and the person you become as a result of the experience.
As stated above, informational interviews and assessments are beneficial, but the best guide is sometimes internal. Self-awareness is the best compass.
In the end, it is not what major you select, so much as what you become from the experience.
Thanks,
Gerard Baltrusaitis