Anonymous wrote:How old is your kid anyway.
People say all sorts of things when the kids are little but then completely pivot when the kids are in high school. If you don’t use your legacy status for your kid, then by all means come back and lecture everyone
Anonymous wrote:You seem to lack a ton of awareness. Wow.
But I predict you'll send your kid to a Big 3-type school for the education. Because you value it and correctly want the best foundation possible. And you'll meet lots of other Ivy-educated parents who feel the same way. They desire the best education and a kid who is curious, passionate and hard working. Then those kids, because they got a great education and have Ivy-educated parents who value learning for its own sake, will get the coveted Ivy spots. And everyone else wants to be you- someone who has options and opportunities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure- I went to Princeton. I grew up in an immigrant household with zero expectation for going to an ivy. And I somehow got in and it was fine. I loved the social aspects and the resources but the education wasn’t all that great. Anyway, forward to the real world and my classmates are doing okay- most of them followed the cookie cutter pathway to law school / med school/ business school. Some have not found their way. Some wasted the education and have done nothing with it. We have some people who are SAHM or working on their 8th year of a phd.
But- in the working world, I’ve worked with people from all schools/ universities and they are thriving (despite not going to ivy leagues.) The world is much bigger than ivys and after a while going to an ivy means nothing : it becomes more about work performance, emotional IQ, and getting the job done. My Princeton degree maybe comes into play when I apply for a job but otherwise who cares?
I think seeing all of this makes me less enthusiastic / intense about my own kid going to an ivy. I don’t quite get the emphasis/ obsession. I’m more concerned with my daughter having a really good education from k-12 so she can tackle any career she wants. I just saw a post about not going to a top private school because it won’t get you into an ivy. Why is it all about ivys? Isn’t the goal of parenting to help your kid have a great foundation/ school environment that works for them? What are you assuming an ivy will do for your kid? Look around your work- did everyone go to an ivy? Is everyone who is successful only from an ivy?
ivy /ˈaɪvi/ noun. plural ivies.
Really ???
What is the plural of ivy?
Answer
The noun ivy can be countable or uncountable.
However, in more specific contexts, the plural form can also be ivies e.g. in reference to various types of ivies or a collection of ivies.
Ivy grads often see pattern where it's not obvious. They usually crack the spelling code by 6th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure- I went to Princeton. I grew up in an immigrant household with zero expectation for going to an ivy. And I somehow got in and it was fine. I loved the social aspects and the resources but the education wasn’t all that great. Anyway, forward to the real world and my classmates are doing okay- most of them followed the cookie cutter pathway to law school / med school/ business school. Some have not found their way. Some wasted the education and have done nothing with it. We have some people who are SAHM or working on their 8th year of a phd.
But- in the working world, I’ve worked with people from all schools/ universities and they are thriving (despite not going to ivy leagues.) The world is much bigger than ivys and after a while going to an ivy means nothing : it becomes more about work performance, emotional IQ, and getting the job done. My Princeton degree maybe comes into play when I apply for a job but otherwise who cares?
I think seeing all of this makes me less enthusiastic / intense about my own kid going to an ivy. I don’t quite get the emphasis/ obsession. I’m more concerned with my daughter having a really good education from k-12 so she can tackle any career she wants. I just saw a post about not going to a top private school because it won’t get you into an ivy. Why is it all about ivys? Isn’t the goal of parenting to help your kid have a great foundation/ school environment that works for them? What are you assuming an ivy will do for your kid? Look around your work- did everyone go to an ivy? Is everyone who is successful only from an ivy?
ivy /ˈaɪvi/ noun. plural ivies.
Really ???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure- I went to Princeton. I grew up in an immigrant household with zero expectation for going to an ivy. And I somehow got in and it was fine. I loved the social aspects and the resources but the education wasn’t all that great. Anyway, forward to the real world and my classmates are doing okay- most of them followed the cookie cutter pathway to law school / med school/ business school. Some have not found their way. Some wasted the education and have done nothing with it. We have some people who are SAHM or working on their 8th year of a phd.
But- in the working world, I’ve worked with people from all schools/ universities and they are thriving (despite not going to ivy leagues.) The world is much bigger than ivys and after a while going to an ivy means nothing : it becomes more about work performance, emotional IQ, and getting the job done. My Princeton degree maybe comes into play when I apply for a job but otherwise who cares?
I think seeing all of this makes me less enthusiastic / intense about my own kid going to an ivy. I don’t quite get the emphasis/ obsession. I’m more concerned with my daughter having a really good education from k-12 so she can tackle any career she wants. I just saw a post about not going to a top private school because it won’t get you into an ivy. Why is it all about ivys? Isn’t the goal of parenting to help your kid have a great foundation/ school environment that works for them? What are you assuming an ivy will do for your kid? Look around your work- did everyone go to an ivy? Is everyone who is successful only from an ivy?
ivy /ˈaɪvi/ noun. plural ivies.
Anonymous wrote:Full disclosure- I went to Princeton. I grew up in an immigrant household with zero expectation for going to an ivy. And I somehow got in and it was fine. I loved the social aspects and the resources but the education wasn’t all that great. Anyway, forward to the real world and my classmates are doing okay- most of them followed the cookie cutter pathway to law school / med school/ business school. Some have not found their way. Some wasted the education and have done nothing with it. We have some people who are SAHM or working on their 8th year of a phd.
But- in the working world, I’ve worked with people from all schools/ universities and they are thriving (despite not going to ivy leagues.) The world is much bigger than ivys and after a while going to an ivy means nothing : it becomes more about work performance, emotional IQ, and getting the job done. My Princeton degree maybe comes into play when I apply for a job but otherwise who cares?
I think seeing all of this makes me less enthusiastic / intense about my own kid going to an ivy. I don’t quite get the emphasis/ obsession. I’m more concerned with my daughter having a really good education from k-12 so she can tackle any career she wants. I just saw a post about not going to a top private school because it won’t get you into an ivy. Why is it all about ivys? Isn’t the goal of parenting to help your kid have a great foundation/ school environment that works for them? What are you assuming an ivy will do for your kid? Look around your work- did everyone go to an ivy? Is everyone who is successful only from an ivy?