Okay. This article might hit a nerve with some people, but it is not meant to be an assault on anyone's major or educational experiences. As a person with two "worthless" degrees, I have done okay for myself, which just goes to show that it's more about the person than the paper.
Back to the point, what do ya'll think about this list? I was very surprised to see the strong representation of agricultural degrees which accounted four 3/5 of the total. I know that an engineer (especially petroleum engineers nowadays) will usually squash any liberal arts or soft-science majors in terms of job availability and pay-scale, but for the non-technical/specialty degrees (so no doctors, lawyers, engineers, etc.) do you think a degree makes that much difference or is an indicator of success?
Keep in mind that when someone criticizes someone's "worthless" degree, that person is among the top 1/4 (about 24% of people I think) who even have a Bachelors degree in the U.S. When you get into masters, doctorates, J.D.'s, etc., the numbers get much lower.
http://education.yahoo.net/articles/....htm?kid=1KWNU
The top 5 "Most useless" degrees were:
1. Agriculture
2. Fashion Design
3. Theater
4. Animal Science
5. Horticulture