BLPRKFRNKS states:
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This thread is right up my alley. My 2010 son is wanting to find a school to play baseball at and get an engineering degree. He has started his search by looking at the top academic schools in CA and it doesn't look promising. Sociology (Stanford), Political Science, American Studies??(Berkeley), Communication, Kinesiology, and Business are the majors of the baseball players on rosters at top schools. There is an average of about one or two students out of 35 that is taking the tough major.
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It really depends on the kid and school. Stanford and Cal encourage all athletes to take whatever major they want, but they also provide realistic counseling. [note: I went through five majors before I found the right fit, and I don't even work in that area.]. Plus Stanford won't take a player who can't succeed academically, whereas other schools have greater latitude. It's hard to tell the exact distribution of majors from the Stanford baseball roster, because they don't require you to declare a major until your third year. Many baseball players take difficult majors, including math and engineering.
Of the 8-9 Stanford players who had majors declared on the website, 5 were sociology, 2 engineering, and 1 economics. One player who graduated this year had a degree and very high GPA in computational matehematics.
Stanford baseball's majors distribution is probably not too disproportionate to the entire student body, which includes a ton of kids who are pure liberal arts majors seeking careers in, among others, politics and public policy. Not everyone thinks a sociology or psych degree from Stanford fails to prepare one for life or for a career. Also remember that at Cal, the Haas School of Business is one of the best in the nation. Rice also has serious academics, as do the Ivies.
The following are the top 5 majors for all male athletes (including football) at Stanford:
1st place: Economics
2nd place: Human Biology (Pre Med)
3rd place: Political Science
4th place: Sociology
5th place: Psychology
Stanford has no non-academic majors.
When we were talking to a number of schools this year, some openly discouraged a hard major while others said they provide enough academic support to ensure that a player can make it in his major if that's his desire. Shame on schools that don't encourage strong academic performance and freedom to choose a major.
Baseball has a way of testing desire on many fronts, and if a player really wants to succeed academically, he can.