| Midwest is super chill - grew up in a wealthy northern suburb of Chicago and kids are happy with Big 10 schools. Kids thrilled about getting accepted to Northwestern, Michigan, or Wisconsin. Elite or bust is pretty rare. |
| You idiots are completely insane. I feel for your spawn. |
Sounds healthy! |
Yes!! |
+1 |
I mean, that's all just objectively true. |
Nobody it clamoring to get their kid into Columbia. Fake Ivy neurotic weirdo college. |
Well yeah, that's flyover country for ya. |
LOL, any public university over a T30 private. Okay... Rich would rather flex their wealth and shield their kids from proles sending their kids to mid tier privates like SMU, Pepperdine, Miami, Villanova, and Wake Forest over an over-enrolled public flagship full of grubby strivers |
Oh, there were quite a few Northern Californians caught up in the sting. My friend saw the FBI roll up one morning to bust in on her neighbor for the Varsity Blues op. |
Are you talking about your experience or do you have HS kids? If you're reading this board, you know how many kids are dying to get those Big10 schools. And, not getting in with perfect/near-perfect scores and excellent ECs. Yes, they would be thrilled. |
Having moved to suburban Maryland from Palo Alto, it is tough to compare the two. The biggest difference to me is that people here are more focused on the college name/prestige and people there are more concerned with college as a means to what happens after college. There, it is much more about getting a top tech, consulting, or banking job or getting into a top grad school rather than just going to Stanford or Harvard or Yale. Getting into a great school is the start everyone there wants but that alone doesn't then lower the pressure on the kids (it is like winning an initial playoff game in professional sports; on to the next one, which is even more important). Here, it feels like being admitted and starting at a prestigious college is an end in itself and then the external pressure drops, even for Big 3 or TJ kids. It isn't surprising that you see far more Google, Meta, and Amazon swag in Palo Alto than college shirts (non-Stanford anyway). In DC, I've never seen so many people in their 30s and 40s still advertising where they went to school
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I’m, DMV IS the tri-state. |
Why CA? I thought they prided themselves to be too “laid back” to care about college prestige. |
Why Bay Area? Isn’t it filled with a bunch of people raised by hippies? |