Hi everyone,
I'm Ben from 80,000 Hours. We do careers advice for effective altruists.
If you have any questions about your career, please post them here and I'll do my best to answer them.
In the meantime, you can check out our online career guide: 80000hours.org
Ben
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I wonder if anyone here can help me with my university course choice? I'm between two minds trying to choose an undergraduate degree - I think I'm going to pick either a finance course, with an aim towards earning to give, or a more humanities-focused course - philosophy, politics, economics and sociology. The latter is at a more prestigious university, and is apparently a fairly well respected degree among employers, but doesn't show the same clear route to effective altruism that finance does, though I would imagine it is reasonably strong in terms of advocacy potential, especially if I pursue politics or journalism. It's also a broader course and lets me keep my options open until I figure out what I want to do. I'd describe my abilities as fairly well-rounded - I would say I'd perform reasonably well in finance if I could sustain interest, as I do like maths and do well at it. Can anybody offer any input? I'll include the links to the courses below.
http://www.nuigalway.ie/science/undergraduate-courses/financial-mathematics-and-economics.html https://www.tcd.ie/courses/ppes/
Could you do something more quantitative at Trinity? Generally more hard and quantitative keeps your options open better i.e. maths keeps your options open better than economics, and that keeps your options open better than finance.
I'd focus on options open more than prep for earning to give at this stage, however, if you were going for earning to give, then quantitative subjects like statistics, applied maths, engineering, and physics are also associated with the highest earnings. Though finance can be fine too.
I see that at Trinity you could also do pur... (read more)