Top products from r/olemiss

We found 3 product mentions on r/olemiss. We ranked the 2 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/olemiss:

u/ghostofpennwast · 1 pointr/olemiss

http://leadership.olemiss.edu/for-current-um-students/

This program is generally well regarded. Just do well in the prerequisites.

It is sort of akin to political science, but has more of the economics stuff that'll be useful to get you cool jobs (ie, you might be doing more business stuff for a sports team or something in the marketing world. Most people overestimate the size and capacity of marketing as a career field.)
Still, I would really try to CLEP out of everything you can.

http://www.amazon.com/CLEP-Human-Growth-Development-Preparation/dp/0738603961

They sell guides like this (I mentioned it earlier), but if it is an easy subject that you're looking to take for clep, reading the book should be enough to get you through it.


What did you get on the ACT if you don't mind?

If you're pretty smart, being in the Public Policy Program will sort of shepherd you from being lost in the crowd of a big school with apathetic advisers.

Also, even if you major in some random liberal arts thing or your degree doesn't exactly match what you're doing or there is no direct equivalent (say you were working somewhere in the sports world), the better your GPA, the greater the chances of you being accepted to do whatever you want to do.

Even if you decide on law school or business school in a few years, your GPA will be really important. And even if you had some sort of dramatic career change to move towards something like medicine or something very math heavy, it is a relatively small group of classes that separate you from those fields of study. Not that you should only pick an easy major or easy classes, but plenty of people decide they want to study biochemistry or biology, trash their major, switch majors, and then end up studying IMC (not that imc is bad, but making a 3.0 with biology will make you untouchable to law school, and even hamstring you a bit at the business school admissions process).

Picking up useful skills like the business/economics stuff, or a language can really help you with certain fields of study, or put you into niche positions.

u/Knowakennedy · 3 pointsr/olemiss

Dude add some battery powered clock hands to the colonel and I'd put it in my living room