• Explore Their Path


    Use this blog to learn about students, faculty, staff, and alumni in your majors of interest. Find Your Major!

  • Explore Stories By Majors and Minors

Amie Lu ’20, Switched from Biology to Advertising Major

Profile Photo of Amie Lu with Graduation StoleCurrent Student, Alumni, Faculty, or Staff?: Alumni

Name: Amie Lu

Title: Brand Ambassador

Company / Department: Oliver Space

Major(s), Minor(s), Program(s): Majored in Advertising and was part of the McGrath Scholars

Previous Major(s), Minor(s), Program(s): Biology

What attracted you to your initial major(s) and minor(s)?: I started off with Biology because I was inspired by those in my family and sought to become a pediatrician.

What inspired you to change program(s)?: During my time in community college, I realized that STEM classes didn’t interest me as much as I thought. I also learned that those classes brought on more stress and made me realize I wasn’t as happy, so I looked into the Advertising program upon transferring to USF.

What did you like best about your major(s) and minor(s)?: For Advertising, I enjoyed having professors from the industry teaching us and sharing their experiences as well as working with different peers to learn more about ourselves.

What was most challenging about your major(s) and minor(s)?: Being disciplined and not being closed minded. In the world of Advertising, things can change quickly, just like life.

How did your major(s) and minor(s) prepare you for your career?: The Advertising department did a very good job with creating hands on assignments that would be similar to situations to that of in the actual industry. This allowed me to gain a better understanding of what role I would best fit.

What resources helped you with your exploration journey?: CASA, Student Leadership & Engagement (SLE), Career Services, and CAB. All three helped me better understand what I actually enjoy and what I don’t.

What advice do you have for students exploring majors?: Your first major is not your last. Do what makes you happy.

XO Davis, Data Science Major

Name: XO Davis

Major: Data Science

Previous Major: Biology, Chemistry

What attracted  you to your initial major?: My desire to help people in the medical field by making them healthy and happy

What inspired you to change programs?: My performance in the Biology major wasn’t going as well as I would’ve wanted it to so I found it best to think of a new pathway to medical school.

What do you like best about your current major?: I like the flexibility the major offers and how it still gives me the option to have a minor with less stress instead of having a fixed schedule for the next years of college. This offers me the ability to have a bio major if I want to and take the prerequisites for medical school while also having a set major that will offer me a good career in the long run.

What is most challenging about your current major?: I can’t say so far because this is going to be my first semester with the major but if there is going to be a challenge then it will most likely be the intense math.

What sort of internships and career opportunities have your explored?: I have done internships in hospitals for the past 2 summers so that I can get a feel of how it is there and if I would want to still pursue that career.

What sort of extracurricular opportunities have you participated in?: Intramural Basketball, Many Hayes vs Gillson activities, Multiple sorority sport competitions

What sort of resources have helped you with your exploration journey?: CASA

What advice do you have for students exploring majors? If you aren’t really feeling your major by the first semester or you don’t know exactly what you want to do then don’t be stressed about it. In my opinion that is what freshman year is somewhat meant for, to get a feel of multiple majors by talking with friends and upper class men. If you aren’t a freshman then still exploring your passions is better than sticking to something that you don’t genuinely like or love.

Jazmine Kelleher, Identifying Her True Passions at USF

Jazmine Profile PhotoJazmine Kelleher

Major: Entrepreneurship & Innovation

Minors: Neuroscience and Architecture & Community Design

There is an undeniably increasing amount of pressure placed upon students to know what they want to do with their lives at the transition from high school to college. When college majors used to be a concern for actual college students, such decisions now amass the minds of younger and younger students. In my experience it is not uncommon to hear middle school aged children discussing application strategies for Stanford’s bio program or MIT’s computer science major. I was too one of this believers. A believer that I had to know what I wanted to not only study but do with the rest of my life. The problem was that from a young age I was enchanted with everything and learning was simply fun. So how could I choose one area of study to keep me satiated? Well the answer to that is that I couldn’t. About mid-year through high school I decided that I was going to be engineer. It was a goal I choose, became passionate about and then deeply entrenched it. Once I reached college applications senior year my passion had changed, and I decided it was right to put my love for science to the test and pursue biology— I was going to be a neurosurgeon. I once again became enthralled in the idea, I read books talked to my family members who were physicians and declared a path of a major in biology with a focus in molecular biology and a minor in neuroscience at USF. I was SET.

The fall of my freshman year of college rolled around and I began my heavily science based curriculum, but something wasn’t clicking… I enjoyed what I was studying, but frankly I was bored. I was reading biology textbooks, attending chemistry lectures, taking part in group study sessions, but the fire was weak, the flame of biological passion had died. So I researched what I could do with it, maybe the idea of being a neurosurgeon was getting stale…. So, game change I was going to be a patent lawyer. I had some science, I had some law, this would keep me going, I convinced myself.

However, as first semester came to a close, my interest for biology wasn’t there, my mind wondered from my lectures, I couldn’t focus on school like I always had before, and that’s when I realized maybe it wasn’t a prospective career goal that needed to be altered but my major. But no! I had committed to biology, I told myself. I can’t quit. That winter break I did some deep soul searching and began talking to all the people in my life who knew me the best and instead of piecing together a career from the top-down, it was time I focused on what would keep me satiated in the classroom, and the answer to that was a lot. So, the answer was then to study many different academic realms.

I began with identifying the “bones” of my ambition and fire, and it always came back to fact that I have a go-getter, entrepreneurial spirit. So the base to my educational smorgasbord became my current major, Entrepreneurship & Innovation. Then I had to choose what else would maintain my interest. A big piece in that puzzle was science, so I kept my neuroscience minor. But there was a lingering piece, my level of visual creativity, and that came in with my love of architecture. Thus, today I am an Entrepreneurship & Innovation major with a double minor in Architectural and Community Design and Neuroscience… itself a mouthful to tell people, and it’s exactly what I need.

So, my advice to any incoming student is pluralistic: trust who you are, believe in anything, and don’t be afraid to change your mind. In trusting who you are it’s so critical to not abolish any self-integrity, especially when dealing with something as critical as education; don’t settle for what you think others will be proud of you for studying or for what you think is the right way to go. I always knew I needed a lot to keep me going, I was disinterested on a singular circuit, so I needed to employ many different outlets for my brain to explore. Second, believe in anything. My projected course of study sounds convoluted and busy; it is and it keeps me on my toes, but it’s nothing I cannot accomplish. And third, with the increasing amount of pressure that surrounds our current society, don’t ever feel like you have to stick to something you aren’t passionate about because of what others will think of you. Don’t work from the top-down approach if you can’t maintain passion in the end goal, you’ll just hurt yourself more in the long run.

So, I thought I was going to be an engineer, a neurosurgeon and then a patent lawyer? Well now I know that I like real estate and properties, I am interested in the brain, and I want to work for myself. It’s time to stop chasing a singular goal and see where the avenues of ambition take you when you are tunnel visioned about something so isolating. Thanks to USF’s small, inclusive community I was provided the opportunity to explore what worked for me and what didn’t. My classes are interactive, my advisors are personable and the opportunities are endless. Suddenly changing the world from here doesn’t seem to improbable, but instead quite feasible.