Cav
Former Maddog Whisperer
But in all those fields of doctors and lawyers, the 4-yr is a basic entry requirement. Each of those career fields requires another 4 years in med school or law school. I can't speak for investment banking but I have a feeling that probably requires further schooling, eg, an MBA or something. So for these career fields, the 4-year degree doesn't matter as much.
But talk about jobs you can get with ONLY a 4-year bachelor degree, and the target gets narrowed very quickly, and liberal arts are just not going to cut it.
My point about medicine and banking (less so law) was only that many would think that a liberal arts major would not be able to either get into med school or get a job on Wall Street with those degrees. Simply not true. Nor is it all that uncommon.
Many investment banking M&A analysts don't have graduate level degrees for the record. I know some that went back and got an MBA and many who didn't. It hasn't made a lot of impact on their careers. Most companies teach them what they want them to know.
Bottom line my degree in history never stopped me from getting jobs right out of college long before I started flying. After my first job no one asked what my major was nor what me GPA was. You guys are reading too much into this. Like anything else it's about networking, internships, selling yourself, etc.