No lol Just no That’s because of degree earned and hustle and network and work ethic |
No, at 40 no one should still be talking about where they went to college. DP |
Test scores say i was smart enough, but I was far to ADHD to have been particularly successful at a school which would have really pushed my academic limits. As it was, I got a lot of faculty attention and other opportunities that would have passed me by at a more intense school, e.g. I started working as a TA freshman year. |
My brother got into 3 Ivies but our parents would not pay the tuition. He ended up at Delaware on a full ride (the full ride is why the refused to pay for the Ivies).
He is complete proof that it's not the school but the person who determines one's trajectory. He is now an executive a major US corporation. |
I went to Berkeley. I could have gotten into an Ivy but my parents couldn't afford to send me to one.
I just looked up how much I paid at Berkeley vs how much an Ivy would have cost in 1988: Public '87-'88 '88-'89 UC Berkeley: $1,374. $1434 Min wage in 1988 was $4.24. I was able to work part time senior year and the summer before college to pay my tuition working around 337 hours. My parents then paid for room and board. By the time my younger sibling attended UCLA in 93-94 tuition/fees had risen to $3454. I remember thinking how ridiculous it was tuition had doubled and almost tripled. Tuition Rates Around the Ivy League College '87-'88 '88-'89 Harvard $17,100 $18,210 Dartmouth $17,085 $18,199 Yale $17,020 $18,060 Princeton $16,918 $17,967 Brown $16,950 $17,962 Penn $16,841 $17,800 Cornell $16,320 $17,460 Sometimes I think whether it would have been worth it to have $45k worth of loans to have gone to an Ivy. I have no idea. |
My husband went to an Ivy League school for both undergrad and law school.
Not once has he said his education makes him superior to anyone else. Not once has he brought it up in conversation. In fact, if someone asks him where he went to school, he simply says, "Up north." If they push further, he will say, "New England." He never brags about where he went because he recognizes that he is no better a person nor attorney than someone who went to a different school. Our kids are encouraged to go wherever they feel is best for them-- Ivy, state school, community college, military, trade school, workforce, etc. We will never push them to follow a certain path. |
I attended an Ivy and think the effect on my career has been negligible. It helped for the first few years after college, but after that my actual skills and accomplishments have led to job opportunities, not my alma mater. And I truly don’t care at all where mh colleagues went to school — what matters is whether they are good at their job. |
I suppose I qualify based on your statement above. No, I don’t regret it. I received a great education at a state flagship, a school I selected because I loved the program and the positive energy. (Also… if your negativity and elitism are representative of your Ivy, you gave me another reason I don’t regret my choice.) |
DD got accepted at 2 Ivy Law Schools but instead chose a Law School not even in the top 100, because 1) the gave her full tuition and 2) They were ranked #1 in the field she wanted to specialize in. |
I should add, she studied Health Care Law |
I went to an ivy. My career has been no better (or worse) than people who went to other colleges. My colleagues graduated from a range of schools (and for muzzy, I don't even know). |
Not for a second |
Stay in New Jersey, darling. |
That’s interesting. I’m an Ivy grad and it’s a tenet of life to never bring up the college I went to, but sometimes it has come up with coworkers. Of course I was a diversity admit who prioritized work life balance so have a very lame career so perhaps it’s the dichotomy that causes a stir. |
Yeah I’m from Florida. Going out north or west was a priority. Since we were paying anyway, aiming for the best school seemed prudent. |