Those of you who hang around the lower boards a lot probably know that I'm one of the board's resident linguists (the only other person I know of in that category is probably RedKing.) I am about to begin my second of what will probably be five years of undergrad at the University of Oklahoma, and I'm starting to rethink how I'm doing things.
Firstly, I'm currently a Classical Languages [that's Latin and Greek]/Russian/Linguistics triple-major. If that sounds like a workload, well, it is- I love all three subjects, and it sure makes arrogant STEMlords shut up when they tell me my workload is something anyone could do. (I've still been part of a conversation in which it was debated whether or not Classics is a real major. Sigh).
However, recently I've been brooding on kicking Linguistics out of the equation. This sounds odd, because it's my passion, and I'm already looking at grad schools. However, there are some good reasons not to major in it:
-I already know a lot of the material. Like, a lot of the material. I don't mean to sound overly arrogant, but linguistics is my thing, and I've already suffered through two semesters of intro courses on which I took revenge by citing Marshallese or Pirahă in projects and arguments. I'll probably end up taking courses anyways to learn what I don't already know (theoretical syntax, pragmatics), but I could probably take the final on a number of courses right now.
-There are a lot of linguists who never majored in linguistics in undergraduate, but rather did something related, like classics or a language major. Getting a BA in the subject is by no means a requirement for graduate school.
-I might not end up going into academia as a linguist anyways. The job market for newly-minted humanities PhDs will likely be better 10 years down the road as the current crop of profs retire and the STEM bubble caves in on itself, but it will still be competitive.
-Getting rid of linguistics puts me in a prime position to grab another major. That'll likely be history (family profession- my father is a historian- and I'm quite good at it) or Farsi (beautiful language, was bummed I wouldn't be able to take it this year.)
Advice?