| make you think the person is extremely privileged? Especially if they’re white and/or male? I was surprised to hear that viewpoint from someone I know. I am especially IMPRESSED if I see someone who went to a low-tier college working in a really-hard-to-get job. It makes me think that person had to work especially hard to get that job. I see the college tier system as a frivolous “tax” that may have little to do with someone’s abilities. |
| I assume the organization is full of people with bad judgment at running an actual company and would decline a job if I came across multiple people like that. Like attracts (and promotes) like. |
Well aren’t you a snob |
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| I have literally never gone around mentally comparing the "status" of people's jobs with the "status" of their college. I generally assume that someone working in a highly coveted position is either very lucky or a very good fit for the role or both. |
| I assume that person is a hard worker whose parents weren't rich and privileged. You have to work a lot harder to prove yourself if you don't have an elite college on your resume. |
| How would a privileged person end up at an embarrassing low tier school? Wouldn't they use privilege to get into a good school they weren't qualified to attend? |
| That’s a moronic viewpoint. If one majors in certain subjects at any school, or has a strong aptitude for math or related areas, they will succeed. The fixation on rankings is becoming almost pathological among some people. |
| There was a thread on here about an early Google employee who’d become an exec there. He went to Providence College in RI. People were saying that if he weren’t a white male he wouldn’t have gotten anywhere near there with that college pedigree. |
| What is a really hard to get job? |
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No, it just means they’re better at their jobs.
College is so overrated. |
Journalist at NYT, tenured professor, AI researcher, MBB consultant, investment banker |
That is what many people want to believe. Well adjusted, happy people with full lives don’t think that way. |
| The people I know who graduated from top tier schools have very average successful careers. Also, they have below average social lives. It may be due to poor soft skills. I know several people with lower tiered schools who have great careers (maybe due to good soft skills), even a couple people without college degrees. Yes, one is a SVP at a major company another is in sales and makes tons of money. |
| How do you know the college that your colleagues went to? |