they are for students from good schools. |
And those students are not typical. |
Can you give examples? |
Your question isn’t as relevant as you think, because people actively want and seek different kind of jobs, which don’t all pay the same. The question is really how well a major or school prepares a student to live out their intention. But that’s much, much harder to measure than the quantity of people in finance or tech within a certain major. |
So that means that people in STEM prefer to only read content generated by AI? |
To this day, I would posit 80%+ kids just take the “best” job they can get from college…which usually means highest paying. So it is relevant to look at median earnings because it indicates in general what jobs are available to that school’s grads. |
You think that 80% of students from the caliber of schools being discussed in this thread have so little intention that they not only take whatever the highest paying job is offered to them, but also remain that passive about their career for ten years? A different way of putting it: you think that students who choose teaching or museum curation or social service or journalism would have chosen Bain or McKinsey if only they’d been offered that path? If that’s true, then median income would be the only relevant measure. But I suspect there’s a flaw in your underlying premise. |
Yeah, I do…because my kid attends one and seems to be the only kid with any real intent while the others are flailing trying to find the best job they can. I don’t think any of these kids ever intend to go to Bain or McKinsey when they enter college…but then many choose it when they realize their field of interest doesn’t really lead much of anywhere. Guess you haven’t read the numerous articles documenting this exact phenomena. |
I actually think the career results of HYP show that yes- students don’t have that many passions and many will take the bag and leave. If you’re offering a high enough salary and aren’t an oil/gas company, college students will flock towards you. It’s not that they don’t want to do journalism, but it’s a lot easier to get a consulting job from a top school than journalism. Plus, career development offices push consulting and finance more than any other career. |
The kids who choose the former are either stupid, have family money, or both. |
Or have souls, unlike you apparently. |
McKinsey, Bain, and BCG approve this message. |
Making idiotic life choices means you have a soul? Sure, Jan. |
I mean what good do teachers do anyway amirite |
Good for you, PP! Excellent strategy! |