At YSU you are required to complete both "major" and "minor" concentrations of courses. Everybody has a pretty clear idea of how to pick a major (it’s what you want to specialize in). But how to pick a minor seems a little fuzzier. Actually, the same considerations should go into picking both major and minor.
You’ll find there are good reasons for you to choose one minor over another. They have to do with what you expect your minor concentration to do to and for you. Here are some of them:
Choose carefully, of course. If you pick an area that will give you workplace advantage, it might not be very important for you later on in life. Or, if you pick a creative area, such as ceramic arts, you won’t find much of a direct connection to getting a job.
Also, what seem to be natural marriages can represent an unwise use of your time. For example, there’s lots of overlap among disciplines in social studies, or fine arts, or business. You’d want to make sure you’re not studying something in one course in one department, and then studying it again in another department.
And, you might find that to learn some skills won’t require you to tie up a full minor. Can you learn enough about a field by taking only a course or two?
Most important of all is to make your choice carefully and based on good reasons. Be careful not to choose a minor as a result of not choosing, or to choose based on what a friend might have done. It’s your education, after all, and it’s your life.
Fred Owens, PhD
10/01, 3/05, 2/07