eli5 American college subjects

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I live in Australia where if you study a particular degree, all (or the vast majority) of your subjects are directly related to that field.
I may be wrong but movies tend to give me the impression that at American universities/colleges, all students study a wide array of subjects, attend random lectures, and students room with people studying different things.
It also appears to be a lot about the lifestyle and not just get in, do your study, get your degree.

Are American studies specialised or more general?
Thank you! 🫶

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95 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Probably depends on the school and what you’re studying. Most movie script writers majored in some kind of art, and so their exposure to college is a bunch of general courses like you see in the movies. Science and engineering majors are generally more focused.

That being said, there are still distribution requirements. For example, I was required to take a few engineering classes outside of my major. (My favorite was structural engineering lab [I was a CS major]; basically, we built stuff then broke it and did a whole bunch of calculations as to how far the bridge would move before catastrophic failure, how much force would be required to destroy it, etc.) I’d say this was useful because as a software engineer, you’re not doing theoretical computer science, you’re building software for the real world. There was also an English requirement, but the English classes weren’t literature; they were reading and writing technical reports and documentation. And there were electives, but depth was required, not just breadth. We were not permitted to take just easy-A humanities classes; we were required to concentrate on a field of study and advance to a certain level there. (I concentrated in ancient and medieval studies, which I was genuinely interested in, and I got to go to the fun wine socials in the history department, and there was this cute girl there….)

But about 75% of my coursework was related to my major.

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