• IEEE.org
  • IEEE CS Standards
  • Career Center
  • About Us
  • Subscribe to Newsletter

0

IEEE-CS_LogoTM-orange
  • MEMBERSHIP
  • CONFERENCES
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • EDUCATION & CAREER
  • VOLUNTEER
  • ABOUT
  • Join Us
IEEE-CS_LogoTM-orange

0

IEEE Computer Society Logo
Sign up for our newsletter
IEEE COMPUTER SOCIETY
About UsBoard of GovernorsNewslettersPress RoomIEEE Support CenterContact Us
COMPUTING RESOURCES
Career CenterCourses & CertificationsWebinarsPodcastsTech NewsMembership
BUSINESS SOLUTIONS
Corporate PartnershipsConference Sponsorships & ExhibitsAdvertisingRecruitingDigital Library Institutional Subscriptions
DIGITAL LIBRARY
MagazinesJournalsConference ProceedingsVideo LibraryLibrarian Resources
COMMUNITY RESOURCES
GovernanceConference OrganizersAuthorsChaptersCommunities
POLICIES
PrivacyAccessibility StatementIEEE Nondiscrimination PolicyIEEE Ethics ReportingXML Sitemap

Copyright 2026 IEEE - All rights reserved. A public charity, IEEE is the world’s largest technical professional organization dedicated to advancing technology for the benefit of humanity.

  • Home
  • /Publications
  • /Tech News
  • /Build Your Career
  • Home
  • / ...
  • /Tech News
  • /Build Your Career

What Are the Best Majors?

By Peggy Albright

By Peggy Albright on
September 30, 2020

college graduates holding their paper degreesHuman resources executives advised college freshmen to study engineering, computer science, or healthcare rather than marketing or law to avoid being unemployed when they finished their studies. The advice came in a survey of 150 HR executives by global outplacement consultancy Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

"This recession may have many freshmen second-guessing career plans. Certainly those who were contemplating a future in financial services or home building may be looking for new options," said CEO John Challenger. "It is impossible to predict what the job market will look like in four years. Young people entering college this fall could graduate into a job market that is still recovering from recession."

Skills that are flexible and transferable between industries will go far in helping graduates avoid unemployment, he advised. In the survey, computer science/information technology edged out engineering as the most-recommended field of study. It was selected by 16 percent of survey respondents, who were instructed to select just one field from the 11 provided. Engineering was favored among 15 percent of human resource executives, while medicine/healthcare was recommended by 14.3 percent.

Just 1.4 percent of respondents selected the legal profession and only 2 percent felt that human resources would be worth studying. Less than 5 percent viewed the government and nonprofit arena as a promising career path. The survey didn't look into the reasons behind the choices, however furloughs and layoffs are now commonplace in the previously stable government sector.

"The federal government could be a very fruitful source of jobs in the coming years, as many departments see their staffs depleted from retirements," Challenger stated."However, despite the increasing need for replacement workers, the government has done little to streamline the hiring process or improve its image when it comes to being a great place to work."

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics expects that employment for IT workers and computer scientists will grow 22 percent between 2006 and 2016 and 11 percent in the engineering sector. The healthcare sector, meanwhile, will add 3 million new jobs. (CW, 31 August, 2009)

LATEST NEWS
From Clicks to Conversations: How HCI Is Evolving in an AI-First World
From Clicks to Conversations: How HCI Is Evolving in an AI-First World
The AI Adoption Gap: Why Enterprise AI Fails After Deployment
The AI Adoption Gap: Why Enterprise AI Fails After Deployment
Inspiring Tomorrow’s Innovators: IEEE CS Juniors TechXperience Kenya 2026
Inspiring Tomorrow’s Innovators: IEEE CS Juniors TechXperience Kenya 2026
Parallel Systems, Leadership, and Research Strategy in Computing: an Interview with Jean-Luc Gaudiot
Parallel Systems, Leadership, and Research Strategy in Computing: an Interview with Jean-Luc Gaudiot
Top HCI Trends in 2026: The Rise of AI Agents and Invisible Interfaces
Top HCI Trends in 2026: The Rise of AI Agents and Invisible Interfaces
Read Next

From Clicks to Conversations: How HCI Is Evolving in an AI-First World

The AI Adoption Gap: Why Enterprise AI Fails After Deployment

Inspiring Tomorrow’s Innovators: IEEE CS Juniors TechXperience Kenya 2026

Parallel Systems, Leadership, and Research Strategy in Computing: an Interview with Jean-Luc Gaudiot

Top HCI Trends in 2026: The Rise of AI Agents and Invisible Interfaces

From CMDB to Dynamic Digital Twins: Lessons Learned in Building Enterprise Digital Brains

An Evaluation of Autoencoder Architectures for Fraud Detection in Credit Card Transactions

Parallel Systems, Leadership, and Research Strategy in Computing: an Interview with Jean-Luc Gaudiot

Get the latest news and technology trends for computing professionals with ComputingEdge
Sign up for our newsletter