College RoI by major and college

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The eight Ivies have a better return on investment than many other nonprofit four-year colleges, Bloomberg reported on Friday. The elite institutions have a typical 10-year ROI of $265,500, an analysis by the outlet shows. That’s twice the return of 63 “Hidden Ivies”—other top private colleges—and almost three times the median of all other schools included in Bloomberg’s research.

To get these numbers, Bloomberg used data from Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce. Notably, it doesn’t include students who paid full price to attend school. Rather, the data encompass those who got some financial aid from their university. For that group, the average Ivy alum earns $90,500 a year, according to Bloomberg, while those who went to a Hidden Ivy earn $72,600 a year. Plus, Ivy grads paid 18 percent less than Hidden Ivy grads.

https://robbreport.com/lifestyle/finance/ivy-league-return-on-investment-1235580181/amp/


Well, of course. If you are low SES and your kid is Ivy material, go for it! But for most of us NW-dwelling DCUMs, it’s a different calculation.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Stripped of for profit colleges and nursing/pharmacy colleges/maritime:



1. CalTech
2. MIT
3. Univ. of Health Sciences and Pharmacy (St. Louis)
4. Harvey Mudd
5. Stanford
6. Harvard
7. Olin College of Engineering
8. Carnegie Mellon
9. Penn
10. Columbia
11. Princeton
12. Johns Hopkins
13. Duke
14. Chicago
15. Babson
16. Cornell
17. Dartmouth
18. Stevens Inst. of Tech, New Jersey
19. Georgia Tech
20. Georgetown
21. Worcester Polytech
22. Yale
23. Lehigh
24. Santa Clara
25. WashUniv in St. Louis
26. Bentely Univ, Waltham, MA
27. Notre Dame
28. Northwestern
29. Rensselaer Polytech, Troy, NY
30. Villanova
31. Rose Hulman Inst. of Tech, Indiana
32. UC Berkeley
33. Colorado School of Mines
34. Claremont McKenna
35. Northeastern
36. Washington and Lee
37. Vanderbilt
38. USC
39. Michigan
40. Boston College
41. Univ. of Virginia
42. Rice
43. George Washington Univ
44. Tufts
45. Cal Poly SLO
46. Univ. of Rochester
47. Bucknell
48. Wake Forest
49. Fairfield univ
50. Brown
51. SMU


My kid did not attend one of these, but he’s in a bank training program with many kids from these schools plus Ivies and state flagships and a few outlier schools like his. You get the best RoI sending your kid somewhere they’ll excel.


If there's one kid from Special Snowflake U and all the rest of the kids are from ivies and top tech schools, that means ivies and top tech schools are statistically the safest bet for that program. Congrats on your kids being the outlier but generalizing from outliers is bad practice.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The eight Ivies have a better return on investment than many other nonprofit four-year colleges, Bloomberg reported on Friday. The elite institutions have a typical 10-year ROI of $265,500, an analysis by the outlet shows. That’s twice the return of 63 “Hidden Ivies”—other top private colleges—and almost three times the median of all other schools included in Bloomberg’s research.

To get these numbers, Bloomberg used data from Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce. Notably, it doesn’t include students who paid full price to attend school. Rather, the data encompass those who got some financial aid from their university. For that group, the average Ivy alum earns $90,500 a year, according to Bloomberg, while those who went to a Hidden Ivy earn $72,600 a year. Plus, Ivy grads paid 18 percent less than Hidden Ivy grads.

https://robbreport.com/lifestyle/finance/ivy-league-return-on-investment-1235580181/amp/


Well, of course. If you are low SES and your kid is Ivy material, go for it! But for most of us NW-dwelling DCUMs, it’s a different calculation.


Is there any evidence to support the assertion that most posters here are full pay? Thread noise would make you think that, but it seems statistically improbable.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The eight Ivies have a better return on investment than many other nonprofit four-year colleges, Bloomberg reported on Friday. The elite institutions have a typical 10-year ROI of $265,500, an analysis by the outlet shows. That’s twice the return of 63 “Hidden Ivies”—other top private colleges—and almost three times the median of all other schools included in Bloomberg’s research.

To get these numbers, Bloomberg used data from Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce. Notably, it doesn’t include students who paid full price to attend school. Rather, the data encompass those who got some financial aid from their university. For that group, the average Ivy alum earns $90,500 a year, according to Bloomberg, while those who went to a Hidden Ivy earn $72,600 a year. Plus, Ivy grads paid 18 percent less than Hidden Ivy grads.

https://robbreport.com/lifestyle/finance/ivy-league-return-on-investment-1235580181/amp/


Well, of course. If you are low SES and your kid is Ivy material, go for it! But for most of us NW-dwelling DCUMs, it’s a different calculation.


Is there any evidence to support the assertion that most posters here are full pay? Thread noise would make you think that, but it seems statistically improbable.


Impossible to know - no useful data. That said, it does not seem statistically improbable to me. DCUM has skewed demographics, biased towards locations where 1%ers live.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Stripped of for profit colleges and nursing/pharmacy colleges/maritime:



1. CalTech
2. MIT
3. Univ. of Health Sciences and Pharmacy (St. Louis)
4. Harvey Mudd
5. Stanford
6. Harvard
7. Olin College of Engineering
8. Carnegie Mellon
9. Penn
10. Columbia
11. Princeton
12. Johns Hopkins
13. Duke
14. Chicago
15. Babson
16. Cornell
17. Dartmouth
18. Stevens Inst. of Tech, New Jersey
19. Georgia Tech
20. Georgetown
21. Worcester Polytech
22. Yale
23. Lehigh
24. Santa Clara
25. WashUniv in St. Louis
26. Bentely Univ, Waltham, MA
27. Notre Dame
28. Northwestern
29. Rensselaer Polytech, Troy, NY
30. Villanova
31. Rose Hulman Inst. of Tech, Indiana
32. UC Berkeley
33. Colorado School of Mines
34. Claremont McKenna
35. Northeastern
36. Washington and Lee
37. Vanderbilt
38. USC
39. Michigan
40. Boston College
41. Univ. of Virginia
42. Rice
43. George Washington Univ
44. Tufts
45. Cal Poly SLO
46. Univ. of Rochester
47. Bucknell
48. Wake Forest
49. Fairfield univ
50. Brown
51. SMU


My kid did not attend one of these, but he’s in a bank training program with many kids from these schools plus Ivies and state flagships and a few outlier schools like his. You get the best RoI sending your kid somewhere they’ll excel.


If there's one kid from Special Snowflake U and all the rest of the kids are from ivies and top tech schools, that means ivies and top tech schools are statistically the safest bet for that program. Congrats on your kids being the outlier but generalizing from outliers is bad practice.


ding ding! it is a much easier path to the top when you start at a target school
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know many turning down Ivies. I think parents will look for something to make themselves feel good. With 3-5% acceptance rate it’s a choice very few have the luxury of even making.


This. Everyone I know in DMV (if kid remotely has stats) puts some Ivies on the list as ultra-reach. The conversation is always— kid is going to X—unless they get into an Ivy and then we will pay.

Just look at this board and the industry of private counselors aimed at getting kids into an Ivy. It’s a Tiger Mom/Dad’s wet dream.

When they don’t succeed, cue the veiled puppeted responses putting down the schools their kids got rejected from.


+1
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The eight Ivies have a better return on investment than many other nonprofit four-year colleges, Bloomberg reported on Friday. The elite institutions have a typical 10-year ROI of $265,500, an analysis by the outlet shows. That’s twice the return of 63 “Hidden Ivies”—other top private colleges—and almost three times the median of all other schools included in Bloomberg’s research.

To get these numbers, Bloomberg used data from Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce. Notably, it doesn’t include students who paid full price to attend school. Rather, the data encompass those who got some financial aid from their university. For that group, the average Ivy alum earns $90,500 a year, according to Bloomberg, while those who went to a Hidden Ivy earn $72,600 a year. Plus, Ivy grads paid 18 percent less than Hidden Ivy grads.

https://robbreport.com/lifestyle/finance/ivy-league-return-on-investment-1235580181/amp/


Well, of course. If you are low SES and your kid is Ivy material, go for it! But for most of us NW-dwelling DCUMs, it’s a different calculation.


Is there any evidence to support the assertion that most posters here are full pay? Thread noise would make you think that, but it seems statistically improbable.

It's definitely an expectation by commenters here. A lot of protesting an argument as a priviliged/wealthy person take with little proof or really any reason for assuming someone is wealthy. I do think the types of institutions and college concerns discussed on DCUM are by majority wealthy families. Your average family doesn't have a college list with Williams on it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The eight Ivies have a better return on investment than many other nonprofit four-year colleges, Bloomberg reported on Friday. The elite institutions have a typical 10-year ROI of $265,500, an analysis by the outlet shows. That’s twice the return of 63 “Hidden Ivies”—other top private colleges—and almost three times the median of all other schools included in Bloomberg’s research.



This is not true though. The ROI of an Ivy depends heavily on major. The ROI of an English degree at Harvard is less than the ROI of a computer science degree from pretty much anywhere, including garbage-tier institutions.
Anonymous
The eight Ivies have a better return on investment than many other nonprofit four-year colleges, Bloomberg reported on Friday. The elite institutions have a typical 10-year ROI of $265,500, an analysis by the outlet shows. That’s twice the return of 63 “Hidden Ivies”—other top private colleges—and almost three times the median of all other schools included in Bloomberg’s research.


This is not true though. The ROI of an Ivy depends heavily on major. The ROI of an English degree at Harvard is less than the ROI of a computer science degree from pretty much anywhere, including garbage-tier institutions.
Anonymous
This list is mostly selective private colleges so it isn't surprising that the students who attend them are the highest paid.

For public schools, the list is:

1. Georgia Tech
2. Berkeley
3. Colorado School of Mines
4. Michigan
5. UVA
6. Cal Poly SLO




Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This list is mostly selective private colleges so it isn't surprising that the students who attend them are the highest paid.

For public schools, the list is:

1. Georgia Tech
2. Berkeley
3. Colorado School of Mines
4. Michigan
5. UVA
6. Cal Poly SLO






The numbers are GREATLY skewed by choice of majors. On average, engineering majors make 2X the average for a college graduate during the early part of their career, which is the period when the income data is taken. They are more likely to get high paying jobs right out of college and less likely to get advanced degrees, which can delay higher earnings. This is what drives much of the ROI math. If you simplify a hypothetical comparison to two schools College A and College B, and to two majors, ENGINEERING and EVERYTHING ELSE majors, you can see how important this is. Assuming College A and College B graduates make the same amount in each respective major, if College A had 50% Engineering and 50% Everything Else majors and College B had 100% Everything Else majors, College A graduates on average would make 50% more on average than College B graduates. If you attribute this to overall superiority of College A, it would be misleading. A graduate of College A with a degree in Everything Else should have no expectation to earn more than a graduate of College B with a degree in Everything Else. On average, they would earn the same. The graduate of College A would have to major in Engineering to have higher earnings expectations.

The reason why Georgia Tech tops this list is because it has the highest percentage of engineering majors. You should not assume that its non-engineering engineering majors earn more graduates of the other schools or that its engineering graduates earn more than the other schools. In fact, Georgia Tech graduates could earn less than the other schools in all comparable majors but still top the list because the percentage of engineering majors is so high (this is a hypothetical statement - I am not claiming this is true).

The other major factor to consider is cost of living where graduates settle. I won't go into the mathematical details here, but just consider that the cost of living in California is nearly 2X the national average and you can see how this impacts these studies.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Brown at 50??

And Wash Lee at 36? and no other LAC?


Harvey Mudd College is at #4.


Yes, because they are literally all STEM. STEM schools will have higher ROI, especially in first 5 years out of college.


Anonymous
If you really want to make money in the short term, it appears you should become a pharmacist or enter the merchant marine.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This list is mostly selective private colleges so it isn't surprising that the students who attend them are the highest paid.

For public schools, the list is:

1. Georgia Tech
2. Berkeley
3. Colorado School of Mines
4. Michigan
5. UVA
6. Cal Poly SLO



To add some context, though, UVA is ranked just behind Chamberlain University, which is largely a nursing school. Majors matter.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Brown at 50??

And Wash Lee at 36? and no other LAC?


Harvey Mudd College is at #4.


Yes, because they are literally all STEM. STEM schools will have higher ROI, especially in first 5 years out of college.



And they’re basically TEM. There’s almost no science majors at the college, just a bunch of engineering and CS majors.
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