It seems like you’re not saving much time by doing the double degree, compared to two single degrees. Why not do a single degree in CS and then retrain if and only if the market goes south?
Also… EA aside, what do you want to do? If you really like dentistry and think you’ll do well in it, but coding makes you miserable, then dentistry is probably the right choice for you. For any of this “lifetime contribution” considerations to matter, the choice has to be one that you can sustain.
I’ve updated, without EA, personally I don’t prefer dentistry more than CS. The reason I’m thinking about pursuing dentistry is only for earn to give.
And then first solely majoe in CS, then re-enter dentistry: The problem is after 10 years from now, It’s quite probable I can’t win the competition to go in dentistry school. At that time, the application progress may change a lot, and I may got worse on preparing exams. However, there’s one thing that won’t change: dental/medical schools are always veru competitive.
It seems like you’re not saving much time by doing the double degree, compared to two single degrees. Why not do a single degree in CS and then retrain if and only if the market goes south?
Also… EA aside, what do you want to do? If you really like dentistry and think you’ll do well in it, but coding makes you miserable, then dentistry is probably the right choice for you. For any of this “lifetime contribution” considerations to matter, the choice has to be one that you can sustain.
Thanks for your replying very much.
I’ve updated, without EA, personally I don’t prefer dentistry more than CS. The reason I’m thinking about pursuing dentistry is only for earn to give.
And then first solely majoe in CS, then re-enter dentistry: The problem is after 10 years from now, It’s quite probable I can’t win the competition to go in dentistry school. At that time, the application progress may change a lot, and I may got worse on preparing exams. However, there’s one thing that won’t change: dental/medical schools are always veru competitive.