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Torn between passion, paycheck
LAURA VAN DE PETTE ASST. SPORTS EDITOR LCV722@CABRINI EDU
The clock is ticking down on the second semester, the deadline for students to declare their major is looming and students like Carolyn Steck are climbing into the ring again to fight the neverending battle whether to choose a major for the paycheck or her passion.
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Steck, a sophomore accounting major is growing anxious as fall registration approaches. “College is half over for me and it is do or die now. I need to know what I’m doing or at least be sure of my major. Every time I register for more accounting classes I wonder if I can really make a career out of this after I graduate. My dad is an accountant and majoring in accounting has been my plan forever. I know the money will be good after graduation, but right now I’m bored working in a small accounting firm for my internship. It scares me to think that accounting is not for me,” Steck said.
This accounting major is not alone in her confusion; students across the nation and on Cabrini’s campus are pressured every semester to choose between financial stability and their passion for a possibly less lucrative career.

According to a recent CNN report, “Students that are reported to get the most for their money are those with pharmacy and chemical engineering degrees, with average starting salaries of $52,853 and $81,235, respectively.”
Unfortunately, the top two majors at Cabrini College are education and English and communication, with average salaries starting at about
$30,000 after graduation.
“It’s always good to get lots of input when you’re choosing a major. Parents, friends, professors, they are all good sources. But ultimately, it is the individual who has to be motivated, whether by love or money. Otherwise, it will always feel like the individual is living someone else’s dream,” Dr. Charlie McCormick dean of academic affairs said.
CECELIA FRANCISCO/PHOTO/WEB EDITOR
Senior English and communication major Shaun Smith said, “When I changed majors from biology and premedicine to English and communication, I was told that there was not much money in the profession I was interested. I did not care about that, I just wanted to do what I loved on a regular basis.”
Business administration professor Ruby Remley said, “I think there is a balance