I have personnel experience with this topic. I initially started college as a music education major, but after some early field experience decided music education was not for me. I ended up with a BM in performance, and eventually got my MM in performance as well. When I graduated my goal was to take a short break (1-2 years), find a place to put down some roots with my now wife, and start working on my DMA. I got an office job, and was fortunate to be able to pay my expenses (including my student loan debt). At the end of the second year I sat down with the professor at the school where I wanted to work on a DMA. After that meeting I realized I was done with school. My job was reasonably fulfilling and I had great benefits. I considered myself fortunate to have found work outside of my "major" that ticked most of the boxes. Interestingly enough one of the reasons I was hired for my first office job was the HR representative had hired musicians before and felt they were great employees because they had heightened analytical skills. Early on I switched to a different position in a different office, and I have stayed in that office in various capacities now for more than 14 years.
greenbean wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 1:32 pm
Very few History majors find work as Historians; yet they find themselves productively employed in other fields. I would take a guess that 3/4 of college grads work on non-major fields. Turns out that is okay.
Greenbeen is absolutely right about this being ok. My coworkers over the years have included people with degrees in: English, history, math, business, medicine, and many more. The biggest issue is whether you learn the work and be a good coworker. The notion that an 18-23 year old person has a high probability of knowing what they want to do for the rest of their life is likely low. Do some people have it figured out early on? Sure, but I would imagine most individuals diverge from their original plan by quite a bit.
Do I have regrets? Sometimes I wonder what might have been if I chose some other field, but I have no idea what that would have been. However, those regrets have waned over the years as my own priorities have changed, and honestly I would imagine people of all disciplines have similar thoughts at times.
I have had a few colleagues in music which created an alternative path for themselves in college. For example: Major in business etc and minor in music. Then auditioned for MM programs willing to accept someone with a BS rather than a BM. I have known this to work for two people, and they were very successful in music. I knew of another person who grew up in a family who worked in the trades, and they picked up the trade then freelanced when necessary.
Another path is to go into arts administration. I have two colleagues who now work in administration for a major symphony orchestra.
A few years ago I read an article which argued college diplomas will eventually become a relic, and most disciples will be treated more like a trade. For better or worse I could see this happening.
At the end of the day a degree from an accredited institution will be better than no degree.