Psychology and Maths.
Economics and English. Whatever floats your boat, I reckon.
I can understand your dad. Personally, I thought university was all about personal challenge and thinking and spent 15 years, playing about there (and a year at teachers' college) as a student on both a full-time and part-time basis. Very interesting for me. (I had spent 10 years in full time office work, beginning work at just on 16 years of age. I had much catching up to do, lol.) Philosophy, for example, had a component of symbolic logic and I got very involved with that, taking it into second year as well. It required mathematical thinking. I experienced the difference between an excellent university and a very mediocre one. I wanted to study Law but the university told me, enough is enough, you can nick off (or words to that effect). I kept taking more degrees, until the Law Faculty put a stop to it, lol.
I would not have cared if I hadn't used any of these degrees, because I had a very good job at the university working as secretary to a dean - best job ever. High School teaching in government schools threw me in at the deep end.....lol. Many strange experiences.
Sorry, if all this is totally wrong for me to post. I apologise to readers just in case you are attempted to mount an attack mob.....
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