Dropping a major after application

Hey! I'm currently an econ-math double major. However, if I get raped in real analysis next year, I might drop the math major altogether. This means I would drop the math major after I submit my resume and CV for a summer internship in BB's and other firms. Could I potentially get in trouble if a company sees my transcript upon signing a full-time offer and they see I only did econ while my initial resume said math-econ double?

 

You have to have the right attitude going into real analysis. If you're already thinking about dropping the math major and you haven't even started real analysis, you will probably do poorly. You can't go into it with a defeatist attitude. Work hard and get the A. Besides, an econ-math double major is a great combination and is worth holding on to.

 

Keep in mind that I'm at a USNWR top-5 ranked target school. This means that there will inevitably be a ton of international students and hardcore tiger children (I'm Asian by the way) who will be absolutely brilliant and pone me. In addition to the typical analysis and abstract algebra requirements, I'll have to do comp sci or physics as well for the major.

 
saints2009:
Keep in mind that I'm at a USNWR top-5 ranked target school. This means that there will inevitably be a ton of international students and hardcore tiger children (I'm Asian by the way) who will be absolutely brilliant and pone me. In addition to the typical analysis and abstract algebra requirements, I'll have to do comp sci or physics as well for the major.
mfw pone not pwn
 

I know someone who did compsci and dropped the major once they got an offer. Ask any friends at school who have graduated already what they'd think as well. Try to hang onto to it. However, I am not sure you'd lose an offer entirely over a change in major. In the end they will train you how they want you anyways

"Hire character. Train skill." – Peter Schutz
 
Best Response

After interning and working with people with non-business majors it is definitely apparent that knowing finance is not a prerequisite for performing well on the job. However, given the current market situation I would stick with the major if you are in any finance classes that are applicable to banking. Most likely many of us who just got BB jobs will be threatened with layoffs within our first year as analysts. Understanding finance concepts and the industry in general will give us a competitive edge at the beginning of our analyst stint.

Personally, I tend to loose a lot of my knowledge when I go a semester without a finance or accounting course. Simply finishing up the major might be a good choice in order to stay up to speed on concepts from the classes. This way you will have a better chance at staying in that top 20% or so of your analyst class that does not need to worry about being laid off (...or worry as much).

 

Nobody is going to check that. I would be very, very surprised if it has any impact at all. If you like the finance classes and you have an offer I don't see why you would even drop the major. In the future nobody is really going to ask for your major GPA; people with work experience usually just have brief educational background descriptions and their cumulative GPA.

Take the classes you want to take and finish with the majors/minors you end up with. If you don't have the finance major on their for jobs after your BB it might not be as great as if you had the finance major, but provided you do well at your BB it's not going to matter what your major was in college. The head of my group was a philosophy major and took only one accounting course in college. I'd say things worked out okay for him.

 

Agree with all the above. That said, you shouldn't drop the major for something like studying for the GMATs. You have plenty of time to study for the GMATs after you graduate whereas a double major will reflect well on your resume for the rest of your career. I'm sure you're close enough in credits it can't be too big a burden to simply wait and take the GMAT, can it? It's not like you're applying to b-school right away.

CompBanker’s Career Guidance Services: https://www.rossettiadvisors.com/
 

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