You do notice? Do you go to school with your kid? |
Not my kid’s either. Friends of different races and scholarship to wealthy. It’s quite a mixed and friendly group. |
| My kid’s Ivy roommate is not white and not Christian and not rich. They bonded and get along great. They have quite a mix of friends there-lots of diversity in their group—and quite a few International friend as well . Though we are UMC and my kids go/went to a private HS but the majority of their friends were not Caucasian, nor rich. |
Those are mostly athletes. I meant middle class white suburban straight kids who are not athletes. |
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Rich kids are socializing with rich kids (even if non-white). Seeing that a lot.
And there are a LOT of Uber wealthy international students. Ask your kids who flies privately? It’s not who you think. |
Survival, as if the mean heterosexual kids are going to beat them up and lynch them? |
| My middle-class white kid at an Ivy definitely notices some SES grouping ( e.g. the billionaire kids only hang out with each other) but overall her friend networks that have developed out of activities, classes etc seem pretty varied as far as kids backgrounds. I am pretty sure you’ll find this at most private colleges, your kid may think they know what “rich” is but it will take on a whole new meaning when they learn about some kids backgrounds in college. It’s not really just an Ivy thing |
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So we're high income white people but paying for college isn't going to be exactly easy (we became high earners later in life and it'll be a cash situation that precludes some savings but that's a blessing overall).
My fancy-looking white son has experienced living and going to school in both an urban, very diverse setting and a more suburban, extremely privileged one. While I want the best for him and ultimately want him to be successful AND happy, I have to say that the most appealing thing to me personally seems to be him going to a state school where he can have a more diverse experience and possible reconnect with some of his friends who are more down to earth. I'm sure he would fit in at a fancy college and he might even be able to get into one, but it would be a bear to pay for and in the end I know what it looks like to close off your world to socio-economic and cultural diversity, and I hope he chooses to cultivate a life beyond sporty boaty bros. |
dp.. maybe not, but DC's friend at Duke said something similar to OP. A lot of rich kids who join greek houses. The friend said some of the public HS friends they had are so much smarter than a lot of the rich kids at Duke that this friend hangs with. |
A lot of the ivies have a warped u shaped income distribution, where MC is at the bottom of the U, and the wealthy part of the U much higher than the lower income part of the U. Basically, those schools are mostly made up of full pay rich.
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| And.... so??? |
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This isnt a race thing…
Like bc all things in life, people group off in “likes “ (likes congregate together). My private high school kid, knows he’s had a privileged education. And we are high net worth; close to 9 figures, we fly privately etc , he’s had some unusual experiences as an 18yo. As an incoming freshman at an Ivy, I’m sure he’ll socialize with a wide mix of people….and will be most comfortable with whoever he can share all parts of his background, without discomfort. Note, he’s not white. |
. He will find that yes, race will be a factor, even with all of your money. The rich white kids will not necessarily see him as a peer that your son can say in his head to "let me be gracious and expand my social circle beyond you fellow richies!" That is not going to happen. |
They are more vulnerable. Why the hostile answer? Is this new to you? https://williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu/press/ncvs-lgbt-violence-press-release/ |
[img]these are still everywhere? Plus it’s not like athletes will just hiss at your child |