| There is no such thing as “elite academics” |
| You will find brilliant — and not-so-brilliant — people anywhere you go. The college someone attended doesn’t necessarily make them promising professionals or person. This is good news. For all the disappointed high school seniors rejected by their tier-one dream school, settling into your “safety school” — a term I sincerely despise — might not be such a terrible thing. You’ll still learn a lot — and employers are far more interested in the skills you’ve gained in college than where you got them. Are you good at writing? Are you a good team player? Do you have a niche, in-demand skill like social media marketing or programming? If you don’t have these skills, I have some good news for you — that’s exactly what college is for. These skills are not taught exclusively at the Ivy Leagues or UC schools. They’re taught at most universities and taught well at many. All you need to access these skills, or whatever you want to know or be able to do, is to be engaged in your learning. When you make an effort, the dividends pay off wherever you are. |
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^^^A woke response.
Tell a tech or research company that they should take the 'A' student at NC State over the 'A' Student at Stanford. Not happening. I wouldn't be surprised if the PP is an Ivy grad who is trying to encourage people to go to state school to limit competition for their DC. |
MIT and Emory are great but I am positive our club would prefer a player go D1. Of course , they can go jump in a lake if Emory or MIT recruits my player, but that is without the greatest support from our particular club. |
Tech companies are hiring kids from overseas at six figures because American kids are getting trash degrees that put them 120,000 in debit. That’s big facts. You can shell out top dollar for the same degree easily obtained elsewhere for much less? That’s your priority. Some of the most successful people I’ve been around are from state schools….because most of them are sociable and well rounded individuals. |
+1 Can you blame them? |
They are generally not applying for the same jobs and they are not looking too hard at your grades in any event. Evaluations are very much done on other bases. Undergrad degrees simply don’t matter that much. Where did Larry Page go undergrad? Where did Steve Wozniak or Paul Allen go? Where did Bill Gates and Steve Jobs graduate? I interview and hire plenty of people. You don’t know what you are talking about so stop telling people what to do, please. Talent always finds a way. |
Yes, and this trend is accelerating. Employers are also on to the undergrad programs that are seeing decreasing rigor, as are grad programs. Grad school test scores are the reality check on the crazy grade inflation that we are seeing in “elite” undergrad colleges. |
| I hope colleges become obsolete and is replaced with internships where kids get paid and learn real world skills. |
I take all my advice from people who think Northwestern is in the SEC. |
All 2022 girls in the top 50 on Topdrawer are committed. |
| Yea. Try to go bulge bracket IB with a soccer scholarship from NC State. Rather do club at Cornell. |
But but but the majority of kids are not going to be an investment bankers If that’s is their goal, then I agree with you. But Most are getting trash degrees…even at prestigious schools |
| A degree from an Ivy or "top school" is fine and good for kids that get that - it is a great accomplishment. You do not have to have a degree from these elite schools to be successful. Far from it. I graduated from a state school (Longwood) and will be retired in the next year before the age 50. It is all about how you apply yourself and drive results. You make your own opportunities from there. The "elite school" degree may help you get more initial looks out of college, or better starts but do not guarantee any type of success. I managed handfuls of MIT, Stanford and Ivy grads along the way. In the end, ability and results will lead the way and not what school is on your degree. I started at an entry level role and made it happen over 20+ years. If you can't perform, it does not matter where you graduated from and others will surpass you along the way- even if their degree was from "less elite" schools. |
| The same logic on here about college prestige applies to soccer prestige as well. You don't need to go to some elite club that plays in some elite league. You don't need the ivy league and you don't need the ecnl league. |