You're a sweetheart. |
This is why people like Trump and Bush went to Ivies. To make dumb people assume they are smart. |
PP. You are correct. CEO track is different than Finance. I mention this type of job mainly because it is a different kind of "big money" job that people aspire to, one that state flagships do pretty well at producing since big corporations are more scattered aross America than high finance. And the previous poster was implying PSU's network was full of poors. (Incidentally some pharma reps make really good money in areas where extremely high paying jobs are less common...so that's kind of a stupid remark right there. So do car dealers (not the sales reps) - car dealer families are usually among the richest families in small town America. Easily multi-millionnaire level.) I respect people who build and manage things more than people who are crafty intermediaries, skimmers, and seizers of momentary advantages during financial panics and the like. I have been peripherally involved with high finance types as an MBA (at school and at work). It seems like it does require a kind of mental aptitude that is athlete-like. Which can be impressive to see up close. However, it also requires a focus on the almighty dollar that is somewhat antithetical to human relationships and a high quality life. Kind of cheaply summed up in "He who dies with the most toys wins". You'd never find me wearing a shirt like that. At several times in life, I've been told that I was not greedy enough to be considered for a specific business job. Interviewers have literally told me this - I did not have enough recognizable wants to make it believable that I would do the job well even though I felt my application meant I was sincerely interested. I found that amazing, and I thanked them for the feedback and walked away at peace. Because it's true. Good pay is a measure of respect to me, and something I value, but it's way down the list of what I need and want out of a job. So, to me a lot of Finance comes across as competitive and greedy to the point where people revel in it - it's actually exciting to them. I talked a little about what I've read about finance and PSU because indeed, going to Wall Street is one of the main reasons to go Ivy (to go to Penn vs. PSU). I actually had both of those in mind, as well as Wall Street, at different points in my life and walked away from all of these as options after careful consideration of my goals, priorities, and desire for intellectual fulfillment vs. lifetime total $ accumulation. I have zero regrets but am still interested in general business news and how institutions change over time. What I see happening, actually, is that the big finance employers are less cool in the age of "hit it big" tech startups. So they have to go a bit further afield to find sufficient new grad supply. They have always had an up or out talent model (as does consulting). So they need to keep feeding the machine. I think it's actually kind of a form of "asset stripping" to rob young grads of so much of their free time and happiness in their 20s. |
+100 AAP is everything that's wrong with this area. Labeling kids this or that at the end of 2nd grade is absolutely absurd. |
AAP is the only thing that's right. It's a preview of what is to come in college admissions. The top 10% go this way, the bottom 90% go the other. |
+100 |
What on earth are you talking about? My kids have attended public k-12s and are now attending in-state universities. They have had excellent writing instruction at all of their schools. The liberal arts/humanities majors have to turn in many pages of essays in lieu of exams - certainly nothing multiple choice. That they type those essays on a computer doesn't make them any less demanding or arduous than writing them by hand. DP |
Are you the same poster who keeps talking about your son at UMD CS? |
Ah, the troll rears his head. I knew it wouldn't be long. DP |
DP. Wow, look at you taking the offensive post one step further. Nice. |
Only the original post was offensive. |
"The top 10%" is laughable. No one knows who the top kids will be until high school. AAP is just a bunch of average/above average kids who are often eclipsed by their "normal" peers in high school - not to mention college. Offer advanced classes, sure. But to *everyone*. |
Ha. Hardly. You referred to those schools as "dregs" too. Might as well throw UMD in with them. |
For my DC, the best school I know any of their non-AAP in elementary and middle friends got into is GW. Best for AAP was Harvard. |
The attract the most educated and most intelligent. Yes. It’s where the white collar jobs, for the most part, exist. |