The great thing about flagships is that you can access lots of resources without being in any program. There is just a huge smorgasbord of things to get involved in. So it's not about what you get "given", it's about how you choose to spend your time. It's there waiting for you if you want it. I still go back to my grad flagship for theater, concerts, speakers, etc. |
As an employer, all I can say is that we have seen ZERO correlation between students who went to prestigious universities for their major, and their job performance. If the teaching at their schools and peer group are helping them come out with a better ability to perform their job, then it really isn't showing up in the field.
I went to a "school for the poors" as did my entire family. My husband (who went to a college on no one's radar because of the $ they offered) and I run a successful company and will be retiring soon with a secure financial future for several generations. One of my cousins is a physician. Another will be retiring early also, having done well in his chosen field. My younger brother would have retired by now, except for alimony. Most of my friends from the lab where we worked together have gone on to really successful careers, including one who has an MD-PhD and is renowned in her field. In the current generation (nieces/nephews), the most prestigious school anyone has gone to is UChicago, and all are doing well, including the ones that went state flagships. Most of the choices were made on the basis of finances, so they've all come out with no debt. Anyway, my long-winded way of saying that I agree with the OP. |
This kind of conversation comes up every other week on this forum. No one is right or wrong. There are plenty of bad public high schools and universities. There are plenty that are amazing. Couple private school kids couldn’t cope with the rigor at our magnet program and went back to private school sophomore year. You hear from many Ivy League professionals who say that while they enjoyed the experience they would have landed at the same place with a degree from a state flagship. Just because you’re paying more doesn’t guarantee extraordinary outcomes. There is so much of a grey area in both public and private education that no one can ever recommend one over the over with 100% certainty. If you can ‘comfortably’ afford the private education go for it, but no need to say all public education is low quality because it isn’t. In the same vein not all the private universities are going to provide you the best possible outcomes. You do you and don’t sh*t on others. |
+1 |
No doubt, but if you want to go to Harvard, there's nothing wrong with going to Harvard. There are lots of opportunities at Harvard and you can get a lot of very generous aid at Harvard as well. |
Myself, my spouse and all of our siblings work as physicians, lawyers, professor, startup small engineering company, tech division at google and engineering consulting firm. A high percentage, over 50% of day to day colleagues went to T25 or better for at least one degree. There are very few people with degrees outside the T75 or so and those people could have gotten into more academic schools. There is no working with “the masses” or whatever. Sure we have to function with ancillary staff and nurse assistants with minimal education (GED for some) thats not hard we are all kind helpful people, but the meat of the work we all do is done with more or less mental peers that are very bright. College is a time to push yourself academically. For some that can only be achieved at top schools. For other bright kids they would be better off going somewhere they would be at the very top. |
This is simply untrue. |
I don't know about the others but for the person in the "tech division at Google" (whatever that is) this is flat out false, I worked there. Google cares about how smart you are and what you can get done. They could care less about where you went to school and the population reflects that. Most are probably T100 schools but not all by any menas. And far less T20 than most people believe. |
If academic peer group isn't important to your kid, that's fine. But why disparage those that value it? |
DP: I think the disparagement is aimed at those who believe all the smart kids only go to 10 colleges, and that if you don't go there you will have no worthy academic peers. If you value academic peers, you can go to any of about 200 schools and find plenty of them. Just look at where your own kid's brightest high school peers are -- my kids peers are all over the place from top 3 to 103, each for their own reasons. The friends at Harvard, Stanford, and Chicago are not heads and tails above the other kids, and the peers of the kids at schools in the 80s are no dummies. Don't buy the hype. |
Sometimes I feel like the only one willing to admit their kid is above average, but has typical teenage conversations about inane things and mediocre drive. This is the majority of their college peer group and they are in an honors type program at their university. It’s okay that it’s different and I understand why others would want to be surrounded by different kids. Hopefully their likability and charm will land them okay in the end, we’ll see. |
+100 |
For the record, as someone that posted it differs, I don’t think that at all. I am well aware very smart kids go to a wide range of schools for a myriad of reasons. I think most are just pointing out the experience is different when the campus is comprised of all strong motivated students. |
And if you don't want that constant intense environment, that's okay. But there's nothing wrong with pursuing an education at a highly competitive college if that's what you want. |
Exactly, both a perfectly fine choice pending the student. My issue was people claiming it’s the same and I strongly disagree with that. It’s better it’s not, no one size fits all college experience. |