If you’re paying $50,000 a year for college, you better make sure you’re studying something that will still be in the job market after you graduate.
This is not skepticism. That is mathematics.
Right now, students across the country are struggling to find the answer to one question: Which degrees are really safe?
According to Harvard Kennedy School 2025 youth poll59% of college students see AI as a threat to their job prospects. A Gallup and Lumina Foundation survey found that 42% of currently enrolled students have seriously considered changing their major due to the impact of AI on the job market. About 16% have already switched.
They are right to be worried. AI is already hollowing out jobs in data entry, basic coding, content writing, customer service, and financial analysis—many areas that business, tech, and communications majors have historically entered right out of school.
But not every career is insecure. Some fields are fast-growing, pay well, and have underlying reasons why no algorithm can replace the humans doing them. Students are now finding out and making a smart financial move by adjusting their plans.
Here are five key takeaways with the data to back them up.
1. Nursing and Health Sciences
No sector of the economy is projected to grow rapidly in the next decade. according to US Bureau of Labor StatisticsHealth care and social assistance will add nearly 2 million jobs by 2034 – a growth rate of 8.4%, the highest of any sector.
Nurse practitioners in particular are on pace to become the fastest growing healthcare profession in the country.
And here’s why no AI is replacing them: The job requires physical presence, real-time clinical judgment, emotional intelligence, and professional accountability. You can’t train a model to hold a patient’s hand or adapt to the chaotic environment of a hospital.
AI will completely help nurses – handling documentation, clinical support and scheduling. But it cannot replace the nurse.
Degrees to consider: Bachelor’s degree in nursing, health sciences, kinesiology, or biology; Bachelor’s degree in physician assistant studies, physical therapy, or occupational therapy.
2. Psychology, Counseling and Social Work
The therapeutic relationship is one of the most uniquely human things that exists. Decades of research shows that it is one of the strongest predictors of whether therapy works. Empathy, cultural sensitivity, trust, and the ability to read a room are not things you can automate.
The BLS projects community and social service occupations will grow by about 6.6% through 2034, with counseling subspecialties the fastest growing. Mental health services were already in short supply before the pandemic. Demand has increased every year since then.
If you want a career where your humanity is your biggest competitive advantage, this is it.
Degrees to consider: psychology, social work, counseling, or marriage and family therapy.
3. Education
Teaching is stigmatized as a low-paying career, and complaints about pay are not entirely unfounded.
But it is also one of the most AI-resistant jobs in the economy. A teacher isn’t just transmitting information – they’re managing a room full of developing humans, adapting in real time, reading individual children, and building relationships that determine how people learn for the rest of their lives.
AI tutoring tools can supplement instruction. They cannot replace it.
The BLS projects continued demand for K-12 and postsecondary teachers through 2034, and many states are already facing severe shortages. Beyond the classroom, an education background opens the door to corporate training, instructional design, and curriculum development – all growing fields in their own right.
4. Civil, Environmental and Biomedical Engineering
This surprises people, because engineering sounds like exactly the kind of tech field that AI would eat. And yes – AI is great at design iteration, data modeling, and rapid prototyping.
But engineering isn’t just about crunching numbers.
A civil engineer assessing a failing bridge on site has to apply professional judgment in an unstructured, physical, high-risk situation. An environmental engineer managing remediation in a contaminated neighborhood has to deal with regulatory systems, community concerns, and real-world uncertainty. It’s not something you hand over to an algorithm.
The BLS projects that demand for engineers will grow throughout the economy through 2034, driven by infrastructure investment, the clean energy transition, and health care innovation. These are not endangered jobs. Those are in-demand jobs.
5. Efficient trading – and you may not need four years
According to the BLS, the two fastest growing occupations in the entire U.S. economy by 2034 are wind turbine service technicians and solar photovoltaic installers. Electricians, plumbers, HVAC technicians and welders are right behind them.
These jobs require physical dexterity and problem-solving in constantly changing, unpredictable environments – old buildings, unusual configurations, work sites that never look the same. No robot has been able to handle this reliably yet. No chatbot fixes a broken HVAC system.
Ford CEO Jim Farley put it bluntly: America needs hundreds of thousands of skilled workers to build the infrastructure that powers AI — and we don’t have enough of them.
Here’s the other thing: Many of these paths require only an associate degree, a professional certificate, or an apprenticeship—not four years and $80,000 of debt. If you are a student considering your options and you are not ready for the four-year campus experience, trades need to be seriously considered.
pattern here
See what all five of these paths have in common. They require physical presence, complex human decisions, emotional engagement or real-time adaptation to unpredictable environments. These are exactly the things AI can’t do well – at least not yet.
Right now, students who are changing their major are not panicking. They are being rational. They’re looking at the data and adjusting their plans.
This is what the process of making smart financial decisions looks like.
If you’re still deciding whether a degree is worth the cost at all, ask “Is a college education still worth the cost of tuition?” It’s worth reading before signing anything. And if you want to see where a career in these key fields can actually take you, “10 Fascinating and Growing Jobs That AI Won’t Be Replacing Anytime” lays it out clearly.
AI is not going to destroy every career. But it will eat away at some of them. Choose yours carefully.
