KCIndy
Member
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2007
- Messages
- 6,342
I really appreciate all the advice. I'll use all of it.
Also, I might add that my planned majors were math and finance. Is there anywhere I could start in those areas?
Well...
Those are certainly usable skills. You might look into the requirements for becoming an actuary. (someone who uses statistics to compile risk assessments for insurance companies) From what I understand, however, you have to be really, REALLY good at math and stats to pass qualifiers.... Sounds kinda like it's the "Navy Seals" of accounting!

But if you can handle it, actuaries are arguably among the very highest paid in the math/stats field. Here's an article from CNN Money discussing it:
http://money.cnn.com/2013/04/25/news/economy/best-job-actuary/
All that being said...
One more thing I really detested about academia when I was attending university was the single inescapable underlying truth of degrees and the jobs that they'll get you:
It's not what you know, it's who you know.
Admission: I'm not entirely unbiased here, so take this with a grain of salt. But when I was in school I saw any number of occasions when I (or friends of mine) would bust tail trying to line up part time jobs and/or internships. We would fill out all the applications, try to chase down written recommendations, make sure we took all the necessary classes, and make ourselves presentable for interviews... only to have the position go to some "friend of the family" of the person doing the hiring.
Nope. I'm not kidding. The kids who most often got the best internships and post-grad job offers were the ones who had all the right *social* connections rather than the best academic qualifications.
Of course, maybe that was just the times. I'll keep on hoping things have changed in that regard, but I'm not going to be surprised if it hasn't.
If you aren't fond of kissing tail, it's one more good reason to get out of academia and either: A) start your own business, or, B) learn a skill set where your talent is obvious and incontrovertible.