You can ask this question. It is estimated that you are a math major and don't want to be a teacher after graduation, so you are worried about finding a job. In fact, this is completely unnecessary. In today's society, mathematics majors (undergraduate graduates) can not only be teachers and do academic research, but also engage in:
(1) Postgraduate entrance examination (computer direction, data information, theoretical research direction), postgraduate entrance examination (financial direction, such as economics, accounting, statistics, etc. Mathematics major is very popular), postgraduate entrance examination (engineering direction, material ratio, engineering surveying and mapping, etc. ), and civil servants.
(b) Counterpart major: IT industry (information security, software production &; Programming, data mining, game making, chip program import, engineering calculation)
(3) Non-professional but related industries: computer security, web page making, website making, mathematical physics, materials, market researcher, modeling and solving practical problems.
(d) Graduating from math major doesn't mean that you have been married to math all your life. You have obtained a bachelor's degree in science, and you can engage in almost all occupations you are interested in except medicine, because there is no regulation in any country that majors determine occupations. As long as you have the ability, the employer will not care about your major, because all units understand that the undergraduate stage is to train you how to be a person, not to teach students real professional skills.