Page 1 of 1
Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 8:40 pm
by ComatoseClown
Scenario 1: B.A. in Sociology, summa cum laude
or
Scenario 2: B.A. in Sociology, but also with a Minor in Economics (but no Latin honors)
Questions for you, with the above scenarios in mind:
i. Which scenario looks better to law schools?
ii. You've decided to work for 1 year before beginning law school. Which scenario looks better to potential employers? (My gut feeling is Scenario 2 because of the Economics minor, but my problem is there's a slight chance I won't be able to graduate on time if I minor in Economics. [I really just wish getting a job wasn't so shallow-based in the sense that it's what's on your RESUME--i.e. the word "Economics"--that matters, regardless of if one actually is knowledgable in it but without a degree. Or is this not the case? I'd be grateful for any of your thoughts on this.)
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 8:41 pm
by vanwinkle
Latin honors always look better. Not sure it matters much, but if anyone does care, honors matters more than a minor. Nobody gives a shit about minors.
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 8:45 pm
by Bildungsroman
If there's one thing people give fewer shits about than latin honors, it's minors.
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 8:54 pm
by soj
You're still a sociology major. Many employers LOL at sociology majors--with or without latin honors, with or without a minor.
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 9:26 pm
by abl
Latin honors >>>> any minor unless you want to do something in the specific area of your minor (e.g. if you want to do ibanking after graduation, the econ minor could help...but for law school it's not even close--latin honors).
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 9:40 pm
by 5ky
You must plan on being really bad at economics if taking a minor would drop you from summa to nothing.
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 9:42 pm
by berkeleykel06
Not understanding why these options are mutually exclusive.
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 9:49 pm
by Real Madrid
Which looks better?
Scenario 3: B.S. in Economics,
summa cum laude.
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 10:05 pm
by 094320
..
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 10:08 pm
by Dany
5ky wrote:You must plan on being really bad at economics if taking a minor would drop you from summa to nothing.
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 10:58 pm
by ComatoseClown
Thanks for the responses so far;
5ky wrote:You must plan on being really bad at economics if taking a minor would drop you from summa to nothing.
I should clarify: The reason is is because Economics department at my institution is notorious for being tough, and summa cum laude is reserved for the top percentile of the class or something close to that.
So now regarding the significance of Minors: But wouldn't an Employer look nicely upon a Minor, if the accompanying Major (i.e. Sociology) is not at all that marketable? Why are Minors not considered all that great in general; don't they show that the student took the time to engage in an additional concentration?
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 11:02 pm
by dr123
ComatoseClown wrote:Thanks for the responses so far;
5ky wrote:You must plan on being really bad at economics if taking a minor would drop you from summa to nothing.
I should clarify: The reason is is because Economics department at my institution is notorious for being tough, and summa cum laude is reserved for the top percentile of the class or something close to that.
So now regarding the significance of Minors: But wouldn't an Employer look nicely upon a Minor, if the accompanying Major (i.e. Sociology) is not at all that marketable? Why are Minors not considered all that great in general; don't they show that the student took the time to engage in an additional concentration?
Majors hardly matter at all. A minor is even less work in that field. Relevant skills and experience reigns supreme.
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 11:06 pm
by 5ky
ComatoseClown wrote:Thanks for the responses so far;
]
5ky wrote:You must plan on being really bad at economics if taking a minor would drop you from summa to nothing.
I should clarify: The reason is is
because Economics department at my institution is notorious for being tough, and summa cum laude is reserved for the top percentile of the class or something close to that.
So now regarding the significance of Minors: But wouldn't an Employer look nicely upon a Minor, if the accompanying Major (i.e. Sociology) is not at all that marketable? Why are Minors not considered all that great in general; don't they show that the student took the time to engage in an additional concentration?
Do you go to Harvard or Chicago? Judging by the following, I doubt it, and thus I highly doubt your institution is "notorious" for being tough. Law school is also "tough." Toughen up.
ComatoseClown wrote:I'm a transfer student who was accepted to UC San Diego for this fall, but my admission has now been permanently revoked. All UCs, most privates, and CSUs have already passed their deadlines. Now I'm stuck without a college for an entire year.
With that, I did much research and find that some [accredited] online schools have bachelor's programs beginning in October. These online degree schools seem to be very much flexible.
My question: Does it matter to Law schools if our UG is an Online school (WASC accredited)? (I did attend an on-campus community college for two years.) Will our GPA, say if it is a 3.8, be equated the same as say a 3.8 from a UC school?
The specific school I'm looking at is TUI University --
http://www.tuiu.edu/degreeprograms.html)
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 11:22 pm
by Nom Sawyer
Real Madrid wrote:Which looks better?
Scenario 3: B.S. in Economics,
summa cum laude.
This. From what I've seen this will give you just a tiny boost in applying to law school but a very nice boost in OCI.
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Fri Aug 19, 2011 11:54 pm
by KremeCheez
If it was truly an either/or question - just take the GPA.
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Sat Aug 20, 2011 1:05 am
by Samara
ComatoseClown wrote:Thanks for the responses so far;
5ky wrote:You must plan on being really bad at economics if taking a minor would drop you from summa to nothing.
I should clarify: The reason is is because Economics department at my institution is notorious for being tough, and summa cum laude is reserved for the top percentile of the class or something close to that.
So now regarding the significance of Minors: But wouldn't an Employer look nicely upon a Minor, if the accompanying Major (i.e. Sociology) is not at all that marketable? Why are Minors not considered all that great in general; don't they show that the student took the time to engage in an additional concentration?
Nope, sorry, minors are almost always pointless. Think of it this way: at my UG, most minors were four classes. Liberal arts kids could very nearly earn a minor in history or political science or a number of other fields just by choosing the right gen ed classes. Minors almost always mean "I chose to take one elective in this field instead of in basket weaving. I know slightly more about the subject than my classmates."
Re: Of these 2 scenarios, which looks better: Summa cum Laude or
Posted: Sat Aug 20, 2011 8:38 pm
by Opie
As has been said, majors and minors mean nothing. Unless a job requires a degree in something specific (like many science jobs) then they really don't even look at your major. You should major in something that you're good at or something that you want to learn to be good at.