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Experiment Are you more interested in STEM or Humanities?

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  • Total voters
    19
Castaway

Castaway

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During my school years, I was good at both and had a personal interest in science and math as well as history. But after leaving school, most of my personal research has been on humanities related subjects.
 
Only humanities I gave a fuck about was history and geography
Literature can be alright but in school it was just the most boring and generic dogshit ever
 
humanities bc i'm a good human being
 
My passion has always been in the humanities

I have always lacked the interest for mathematics that drove my father

Unfortunately, my math IQ is much higher than my verbal IQ
 
Humanities because it's just memorizing and you're done with it tbh. STEM you have to understand what's happening and also if you have a bad teacher it's much worse.

I was always kinda bad at math. Not bad enough to do a pure humanities degree but not good enough either to do a STEM degree. Still managed to pass all my math and statistics courses at uni I don't wanna do that shit again kek
 
During my school years, I was good at both and had a personal interest in science and math as well as history. But after leaving school, most of my personal research has been on humanities related subjects.
Humanities, I have always sucked in STEM.
 
Humanities because it's just memorizing and you're done with it tbh. STEM you have to understand what's happening and also if you have a bad teacher it's much worse.

I was always kinda bad at math. Not bad enough to do a pure humanities degree but not good enough either to do a STEM degree. Still managed to pass all my math and statistics courses at uni I don't wanna do that shit again kek
I chose humanities in high school just to avoid maths.
I remember in the math tests I wrote my name in the paper and gave the paper to the teacher without writing anything else.
 
Humanities because it's just memorizing and you're done with it tbh. STEM you have to understand what's happening and also if you have a bad teacher it's much worse.

I was always kinda bad at math. Not bad enough to do a pure humanities degree but not good enough either to do a STEM degree. Still managed to pass all my math and statistics courses at uni I don't wanna do that shit again kek
Most of humanities degrees are useless unfortunately
 
STEM because everything has logic behind it. Of course if you get a shit teacher it sucks but i've always been able to pull through

humanities is just a lot of memorization and you have to deal with weird grammar or random dates with no rhyme or reason just because 'its just like that broo'
 
I chose humanities in high school just to avoid maths.
I remember in the math tests I wrote my name in the paper and gave the paper to the teacher without writing anything else.
Many at high school did this like they chose Latin so they don't have to do math. I chose math but the social science version which didn't include geometry and other stuff the STEM math guys did. But the curriculum was 80% the same.
 
Hate everything. Reminds me of school.
 
Many at high school did this like they chose Latin so they don't have to do math. I chose math but the social science version which didn't include geometry and other stuff the STEM math guys did. But the curriculum was 80% the same.
Yeah, a lot of guys chose "social sciences" and most of people told me to do but I didn't because I wouldn't have been able to pass maths and graduate. I was a below average student and I barely graduated high school.
A lot of guys who were better students than me chose pure science or social science and failed a grade.
 
During my school years, I was good at both and had a personal interest in science and math as well as history. But after leaving school, most of my personal research has been on humanities related subjects.
I'm jealous of STEMcels, some of them get a work related to that.
 
Many at high school did this like they chose Latin so they don't have to do math. I chose math but the social science version which didn't include geometry and other stuff the STEM math guys did. But the curriculum was 80% the same.
I went for an useless humanities degree and dropped out after the first year because it had no job prospects and my parents are old cunts.
 
During my school years, I was good at both and had a personal interest in science and math as well as history. But after leaving school, most of my personal research has been on humanities related subjects.
I do not regret that I have never figured out how to count the number of degrees at a certain angle in a parallelogram. I do not regret that I cannot calculate the equation in chemistry. I am glad that my knowledge of history and literature has given me the way of thinking that I have here. I've always hated chemistry, math, and physics.
 
My passion has always been in the humanities

I have always lacked the interest for mathematics that drove my father

Unfortunately, my math IQ is much higher than my verbal IQ
Rephrased the question to reflect interest rather than competence.
 
I went for an useless humanities degree and dropped out after the first year because it had no job prospects and my parents are old cunts.
When I was very young I wanted to do a history degree because I loved history. Then I realized how bad the job market was for humanities so gave up on that.
 
When I was very young I wanted to do a history degree because I loved history. Then I realized how bad the job market was for humanities so gave up on that.
The exact same degree I went for, dropped out because in the best of the cases you start working when you are like 30 years old (my parents had me with 44 years), and the only job option is secondary school teacher, a shitty life since teens would bully my subhuman ass as they did when I was an student.
Also you have to be constantly moving to another city :feelssus:
 
I've to pursue STEM out of necessity, unfortunately
 
I tried to make a career out of STEM when I got a Master's in histology. The problem is, many STEM positions are gig or permatemp work in the private sector, so you and your entire department can expect to be booted as soon as the research project is over; rinse, repeat, ad-nauseum.

This is why most people who get STEM degrees end up leaving their fields.
 
interested in experimental “visual humanities”, in high school i didn’t care which classes i’d be placed in and i was crammed into basic college level humanities. was thinking just throw me in the default course. once while dissociating i noticed none of the kids could answer the question the teacher was pleading them to at that point, and i never participated in classroom discussion because it generates cringe but i shit you not room full of students and none of them were able to answer such a direct demand in arriving at that obvious answer, i kinda looked around to see if they were just choosing not to but they all looked like they really didn’t know who all otherwise would’ve participated so i answered it correctly and the class finally moved on. mind you, i’m not very bright or anything and have more objective concentration issues, those kids were functioning zomboid-normoids with no larger subjective extracts of core dualism methoded in introspective “multi-adaptability” with which to bound by as informatory inflammation for the “requisite-immune pristine”, more like.
 

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