Once you're in Faang it doesn't matter |
It’s like saying Hitler and Stalin were whites so all whites are genocidal! You may know some Asians who shared GPA etc of their children and from that you jumped to “All Asians.” |
Look, I went to Penn, this is silly. GMU had become a very respectable school where a kid can get a good education and it’s particularly strong in CS. The college experience is different than what you’ll have at Penn and I don’t think everything is about starting salary at all, but bottom line is both these kids are going to do well and the GMU kid can be proud of their degree. I don’t think OP should be denigrating the nephew for paying more for the Penn experience but that’s a different issue. |
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lololololololol....
lolololololololololololol |
By Op's logic, she should have sent her kid to a Jr college for 2 years and then transferred to GMU. She could have saved even more money that way for the same pay check. |
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I dont get the GMU hate on this forum. Ut is now an R1 school and really good at CS and Engineering. It will continue to rise up in rankings given the population and economic growth in NoVA. And if good CS companies recruit from here or if the kids are good enough to pass the CS recruiting interviews that is to be celebrated. Secondly, most top 50 to top 100 schools in the US (out of 3000 universities) can give you a pretty good education.
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| Friend's kid didn't even go to college and landed a FAANG job. Moved up pretty quickly too. |
+100 |
+1 Obviously OP should have sent her kid to a 12-wk SWE boot camp and saved the GMU tuition and 4 years of living at home for the same paycheck. |
A friend of mine was one of the first 100 employees at Google. He was hired while still in high school, he dropped out of HS to keep working at Google. They hired him because he was a hardware prodigy who was running his own online gaming server farms. He designed and built out much of Google's server systems. Retired from Google at like age 31 with 15 years of experience. Totally nuts. |
What everyone seems to be missing is that FAANG jobs out of GMU are an exception and not the rule. The fact that this kid got one means he has the smarts to have done well at Penn if he had applied/gotten in. Outcomes long-term will be the same for him compared to the Penn kid. Besides, after your first or second job, no one gives a rat's a** about where you went to college. |
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What OP is also missing is that many of use send out kids to college in part (if not in-large-part) for the experience.
My kids will be the 4th college-educated generation in our family. We are professional-class workers with good but not stratospheric incomes. We very much view college as both an "end" in-and-of itself and a "means to an end". Someone could hand my kid at FAANG job at age 18 and we'd 100% encourage him to pass and go to college instead. |
FAANG jobs can be fun for young people who live at work. I remember an article in the NYT with a title like "Where overachievers go to feel bad about themselves", that was fairly accurate. |
I was wondering if this is a new trend/fad. |
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This is definitely possible. Of all degrees, CS might be the least affected by university prestige. Tech companies DO pay 300-500K for TOP Phd talent right out of school. Sounds crazy, but they do. Plus options. It's just a different world.
But not every CS grad will get that. 125 is sort of expected TBH for a good student. That 125 could easily be located in Philly or Nova while Goggle 195 is in the valley and that is just COLA. But the the crux of the issue, yes, GMU CS grads with excellent grades and solid skills can do as well or better than ivy leaguers. No question. |